Whoops: Energy Star approves gas-powered alarm clock

by Jonathan Hiskes

This (ahem) “space heater” earned a government Energy Star rating.Photo: Government Accountability OfficeWell this is embarrassing: Federal monitors granted
the Energy Star stamp of approval to a
number of bogus appliances, including a gas-powered alarm clock and an electric
space heater with a feather duster taped to it. The Government Accountability
Office submitted the fake items in an audit to test the integrity of the well-known
efficiency program. The New York Times describes how it worked:

The fake companies submitted data indicating that the models consumed 20

percent less energy than even the most efficient ones on the market. Yet those

applications were mostly approved without a challenge or even questions, the

report said.

“Auditors

concluded that the Energy Star program was highly vulnerable to fraud.”

As Kate Sheppard notes,
Energy Star has been praised as one of the government’s most successful
efficiency programs (until now anyway). Americans are used to seeing the logo
on air conditioners, refrigerators, lamps, laptops, and other appliances.

Sheppard offers another bit of context:

Even

more worrying, the Energy Star program is also the inspiration for the

Obama administration’s proposed $6 billion Home

Star program, which will award ratings and incentives for more energy

efficient homes.

Lane Burt, an NRDC building-energy specialist and
Energy Star defender in the past, wants a stronger certification system:

I think it is clear why the manufacturer self

certification system that Energy Star generally employs needs to be

revised.  DOE and EPA have both acknowledged as much, as increased

verification and compliance testing was part of the suite or improvements they

proposed to the program last year.  In fact, the stakeholder calls on

verification and testing will be held next week and NRDC will

participate. The

agencies have also taken immediate steps in response to the report.

You can fit this quite easily into the narrative
of “government bureaucrats can’t do anything right,” if that’s your ideological
bent. In this case, a select office of government bureaucracy seems to have
failed—although fed auditors did discover the problem. To me, the more interesting issue is how to improve what the
government’s already doing. Read Lane Burt for more of that.

If you’re buying an appliance or laptop this
weekend, Energy Star is probably still
a more trustworthy guide than anything else out there.

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