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Consumer Electronics to Meet the California Regulatory Monster

By Erik Sherman | Nov 19, 2009

The auto industry has been facing it for years. And now it seems that the eye of California environmental regulators, in the form of the California Energy Commission, is settling on consumer electronics, with proposed standards on television energy consumption, according to AOL Daily Finance. That could mean de facto standards for the rest of the country, given the dynamics of electronics manufacturing.

Under the proposal, there would be two tiers of mandatory efficiency standards for all televisions measuring 58 inches or smaller, one beginning in 2011 and the second in 2013. The rationale is that ten percent of the state’s home power consumption comes from the combination of televisions, DVRs, DVD players, and cable boxes, so trimming power use could result in big savings. According to the state, more than 1,000 TV models meet the 2011 standards now, but only 290 would meet the 2013 Tier 2 standards, and not a single one of them a plasma TV over 40 inches.

That has some interesting ramifications for the television industry. Clearly companies could continue to sell larger plasma sets inside California if they could find ways to lower the power consumption, and continue carrying the units outside the state. As for other types of sets, unlike the auto industry, the price per unit does not provide as much flexibility to have separately engineered product lines, with one for California and the other for the rest of the U.S., as automobile companies have had for years. Economics could force the manufacturers to make the California requirements drive all their design and manufacturing for the North American market. And the industry isn’t necessarily crazy about that:

At an Oct. 13 CEC hearing, CEA representative Douglas Johnson said: “The core concern here really has to do with the element of the commission’s proposed regulations that would impose a mandatory power-consumption limit on televisions. Such regulation undercuts innovation, it does harm consumers, ultimately, and it certainly harms TV manufacturers in related industries.”

The CEA will need some luck for that argument to stick. Detroit’s been trying it, to no avail, for years.

Image via stock.xchng user mzacha, site standard license.

Erik Sherman is a freelance journalist whose work has appeared in Newsweek, the New York Times Magazine, Technology Review, the Financial Times, Chief Executive, and other publications. Follow him on Twitter.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Electronics Industry Group Calls California TV Proposal Inefficient [Voices]

    Wall Street Journal - 316 days 12 hours 55 minutes ago

    Just how much power TVs should use has become a matter of growing debate between the California Energy Commission and the consumer electronics industry. Next week, the Consumer Electronics Association is coming out with a new study in a salvo against the CEC over proposed rules for specific energy standards for TVs sold in California. Under the...

  • Fury over California's Proposed TV Rules

    BusinessWeek - 98 days 2 hours 54 minutes ago

    Posted by: Cliff Edwards on November 03 With the California Energy Commission seemingly on the verge of outlawing flat-screen TV models that guzzle energy, the consumer electronics industry is taking issue with what it says are blatantly false accusations about their products. In a blistering op-ed piece published in the San Francisco Chronicle...

  • California approves efficiency mandate for TVs

    CNET News - 83 days 3 hours 12 minutes ago

    The California Energy Commission on Wednesday unanimously approved the first energy-efficiency standards for televisions in the state over opposition from the Consumer Electronics Association.The rules mandate that televisions sold in California starting in 2011 consume 33 percent less electricity than current models and 49 percent less by 2013....

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    Newfoundland and Labrador consumers might soon pay more for electronics under a computer and television recycling plan being floated by the board that oversees recycling in the province. "If you look across the country, you'll see examples of jurisdictions where consumers are charged an environmental fee on the front end," said Mike Samson,...

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    Following California's move to regulate the energy consumption of items such as HDTV sets, the Consumer Electronics Association issued a

 

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