New Energy Star rating chops power use

US appliances feel the heat.

New power-efficiency specifications being implemented by the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) could help consumers purchase energy-efficient electronics while cutting energy costs.

The Energy Star 5.0 specification will help customers identify the most power-efficient PCs and PC-related devices, including laptops, desktops and monitors, when making purchases. Products are identifiable with an Energy Star label attached to the devices.

The Energy Star specification pushes higher power-efficiency requirements in consumer electronics by setting power allowances. The EPA develops separate Energy Star specifications for more than 60 devices including TVs, refrigerators, servers and light bulbs.

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With the Energy Star 5.0 specification, the EPA is trying to raise the power-efficiency bar in PCs by tightening requirements for computer makers to earn the Energy Star label. Some companies, including Apple, Dell, Lenovo and Hewlett-Packard, have already started shipping PCs that adhere to Energy Star 5.0 specifications.

"We believe that products that meet the Energy Star 5.0 requirements will use 30 percent to 60 percent less energy than the standard [devices] on the market, which are largely 4.0 models," said Katharine Kaplan, a spokeswoman for the Energy Star program at the EPA. If all computers sold in the US meet the latest requirements, savings in energy costs could reach $2 billion (£1.2 billion) per year, she said.

The new energy specification should also help reduce energy bills, depending on how the users shut down systems. Power consumption of PCs accounts for a fraction of the home electricity bill compared to heating and lighting, but every dollar adds up, she said.

"We really care about delivering dollar savings to consumers. We know that is important, perhaps more now than ever. But we're also really concerned about global warming," Kaplan said.

Specifications have been set for PCs, laptops and other devices, with power allowances available at Energy Star's website.

The kilowatt-per-hour allowance for laptops has been set between 40 kilowatts per hour and 88.5 KwH based on three modes: standby, active and sleep modes. The laptop categorisation takes into account the CPU, the number of cores, and other hardware including graphics cards. The power allowance for desktops has been set between 148 KwH and 234 KwH. The EPA has also set power allowances for monitors, small-scale servers like media servers and enterprise devices like thin clients.

The EPA hopes to soon launch specifications for home networking equipment like routers and modems, Kaplan said. The agency is also investigating enterprise-level UPS (uninterruptible power supplies) and storage energy specifications. In May the EPA May launched the first Energy Star specifications for enterprise servers.

Kaplan expects to see a quick uptake of Energy Star 5.0 by PC makers, who were cooperative in setting the specifications. The US government and some corporations require Energy Star compliance, so the PC makers are likely eager to make their products Energy Star 5.0-compliant soon, she said.

Lenovo said that more than 25 of its Think-branded business and Idea-branded consumer PCs would meet the Energy Star 5.0 specifications. The company's ThinkPad and IdeaPad laptop models and select desktops have already been 5.0 certified.

Twenty-six HP PC product families have configurations that are expected to meet the new energy specifications, including the recently announced HP Mini 5101 netbook and HP ProBook 4310s laptop, an HP spokesman said.


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Spambo | Published: 07:48 GMT, 02 July 2009

Could you please have someone with some awareness of electricity and sciencey stuff have a look over this article to fix up the use of 'units', as in; "The kilowatt-per-hour allowance for laptops has been set between 40 kilowatts per hour and 88.5 KwH..." and "The power allowance for desktops has been set between 148 KwH and 234 KwH." The use of units like kWh in this context makes no sense. "kilowatts per hour" is a very odd unit that doesn't apply here. I wouldn't be suprised to see this kind of thing in say,"Women's weekly", but for a technical publication, I expect better. -Sorry to rant at you, but this kind of thing has been bugging me for quite a while.

Spambo | Published: 07:44 GMT, 02 July 2009

Could you please have someone with some awareness of electricity and sciencey stuff have a look over this article to fix up the use of 'units', as in; "The kilowatt-per-hour allowance for laptops has been set between 40 kilowatts per hour and 88.5 KwH..." and "The power allowance for desktops has been set between 148 KwH and 234 KwH." The use of units like kWh in this context makes no sense. "kilowatts per hour" is a very odd unit that doesn't apply here. I wouldn't be suprised to see this kind of thing in say,"Women's weekly", but for a technical publication, I expect better. -Sorry to rant at you, but this kind of thing has been bugging me for quite a while.

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