@misc{23142, author = {Stephen Wiel and Laura Van Wie McGrory and Lloyd Harrington}, title = {Energy Efficiency Standards and Labels in North America: Opportunities for Harmonization}, abstract = {
To support the North American Energy Working Group's Expert Group on Energy Efficiency (NAEWG-EE), USDOE commissioned the Collaborative Labeling and Appliance Standards Program (CLASP) to prepare a resource document comparing current standards, labels, and test procedure regulations in Canada, México, and the United States. The resulting document reached the following conclusions: Out of 24 energy-using products for which at least one of the three countries has energy efficiency regulations, three products — refrigerators/freezers, split system central air conditioners, and room air conditioners — have similar or identical minimum energy performance standards (MEPS) in the three countries. These same three products, as well as three-phase motors, have similar or identical test procedures throughout the region. There are 10 products with different MEPS and test procedures, but which have the short-term potential to develop common test procedures, MEPS, and/or labels. Three other noteworthy areas where possible energy efficiency initiatives have potential for harmonization are standby losses, uniform endorsement labels, and a new standard or label on windows. This paper explains these conclusions and presents the underlying comparative data.
}, year = {2004}, pages = {16}, month = {05/2004}, publisher = {Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory}, address = {Berkeley}, note = {Journal, Energy Policy, 2006
}, language = {eng}, }