Energy efficiency improvements in the U.S. electric power sector could reduce electric consumption by 7 to 11 percent more than currently projected over the next two decades if key barriers can be addressed, according to a preliminary analysis of potential energy savings released recently by the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) and the Edison Electric Institute (EEI) during an Edison Foundation conference which examined strategies to meet the growing demand for electricity which is expected to soar 30 percent by 2030, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
“This study demonstrates the potential of energy efficiency to offset some of the projected need for new electric generation as cutting-edge technologies become available and are adopted. We think a 7-percent efficiency improvement is realistic – and gains of 11 percent or more are technologically feasible – depending on the degree to which various obstacles can be overcome.”
-- Dr. Michael Howard, senior vice president at EPRI
That demand growth projection would be even higher without the implementation of existing building codes, appliance standards and market-driven consumer incentives, which will shave electricity consumption by 23 percent, according to the EPRI-EEI study. However, additional efficiency gains could be achieved only by overcoming major market, regulatory and consumer barriers, the analysis found. . . .
Essential steps include increased consumer education; adoption and enforcement of aggressive building codes and appliance standards; creation of utility business models that promote increased efficiency within the power sector; and adoption of electricity pricing policies that more accurately reflect the cost of providing electricity to consumers – and give them the information they need to use it wisely. . . .
At the same time, consumers’ ever-increasing appetite for electricity-hungry devices – even with continuing efficiency improvements – will keep electricity demand on a steady upward trajectory. A 42-inch plasma television consumes two and a half times more energy (250 watts) than a standard 27-inch TV (100 watts). And while many large household appliances have become more efficient over the years, many smaller devices have not. Two 30-watt set-top television boxes, for example, may consume as much electricity as a large refrigerator.
My roommate always leaves lights on, ALWAYS and it drives me crazy. I have to follow her around turning things off!
Posted by: Car Lease Broker Los Angeles | November 16, 2011 at 05:35 PM
Yes it could reduce electric consumption but that's ONLY if key barriers are addressed- like you said. People are selfish and don't always worry about the future of our world, even though they should.
Posted by: Tours in Venice | November 16, 2011 at 06:14 PM
I figured TV's used a lot of power, but I didn't know they used THAT much. Makes me want to pick up a book more often...which I should do anyway.
Posted by: Rug Cleaning Los Angeles | November 16, 2011 at 06:30 PM
Interesting article, thanks for sharing it with us!
Posted by: HighwayLED | December 17, 2011 at 02:35 PM
Any cut to energy consumption is good...hopefully we can raise this percentage over time!
Posted by: beverage manufacture | January 13, 2012 at 03:36 PM