题 目:Analysis of Appliance, Lighting and Equipment Standards
主讲人:James E. McMahon博士(University of California in Berkeley)
时 间:6 月 12 日 下午2:40-3:30
地 点:主楼六层能源与环境政策研究中心
主讲人简介:
Dr. James E. McMahon is anindependent consultant, working part-time as Technical Adviser to the Collaborative Labeling and Appliance Standards Program. He is an Associate and retired Staff Scientist from the Energy Analysis and Environmental Impacts Departmentat the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) at the University of California in Berkeley. He was Leader of the Energy Efficiency Standards Group for 17 years (1994-2011) and Department Head of Energy Analysis for 5 years (2006-2011). He has over 34 years ofrelevant experience, including: 1) conducted economic and technical analysis of appliance and equipment energy performance standards for the United Statesand other countries; 2) published over 100 publications, including a book(two editions, 2001 and 2004) <http://clasponline.org/en/ResourcesTools/Resources/StandardsLabelsGuidebook >
intended for governments of developing countries about how to quantify, analyze and implement energy efficiency policies, specifically national labels and standards; 3) since the 1980s, conducted training on energy efficiency policy for many countries, ranging from China in 1996,to 2011 workshop for 20 countries (mostly developing) at International Energy Agency. <http://www.iea.org/training/energy_efficiency.asp>; and 4) developed and applied computation methodologies and algorithms for estimating the national (for many countries) and state impacts of energy efficiency policies, including end-use models.He received a B.S. in Chemistry from Providence College and a Ph.D. in Molecular Biophysics from Florida State University.
内容简介:
1.Overview of U.S. Standards and Labels Programs
• Appliance and Equipment Standards (mandatory)
• EnergyGuide Labels (mandatory)
• Energy Star Labels (voluntary)
2. Recent and Ongoing Developments
• U.S. plans to complete ~37 rules (test procedures or performance standards) from 2011 to 2017
• Pace is about 6 rules per year, compared to average 1-2 per year for all previous administrations