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ENERGY STAR Commercial Products U.S. Opportunities and Status. Canadian ENERGY STAR Participants Meeting May 4, 2006 Kate Lewis, U.S. EPA. Commercial Foodservice (CFS) Product Sales & ES. * From NAFEM Size and Shape of the Industry (2003). Sales and unit shipments are in thousands
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ENERGY STARCommercial ProductsU.S. Opportunities and Status Canadian ENERGY STAR Participants Meeting May 4, 2006 Kate Lewis, U.S. EPA
Commercial Foodservice (CFS) Product Sales & ES * From NAFEM Size and Shape of the Industry (2003). Sales and unit shipments are in thousands ** ENERGY STAR Units Shipment Data Report, October 2005
Targeted Programs: CFS • CFS Goal: Demonstrate viability of CFS platform • Facilitate communication between industry/Energy Efficiency Program Sponsors (EEPS) • Integrate ENERGY STAR messaging into EEPS programs • Develop and demonstrate CFS “whole-kitchen” concept
CFS Objective • Transform the market for energy efficient commercial kitchen products by helping EEPS develop effective programs that promote (1) a bundle of ENERGY STAR qualified commercial kitchen equipment and (2) water-saving and product operating practices/recommendations for restaurants
CFS FY 06 Strategies • Establish ES’ credibility with and value for utilities • Help make their existing commercial food service equipment programs as successful as possible • Refine equipment package, usage recommendations, and logic/savings model with utilities • CEE commercial kitchens committee • Demonstrate program support and buy-in from equipment manufacturers • ES CFS partner outreach
CFS FY 06 Strategies • Demonstrate market adoption through pilot implementation of the kitchen package with one restaurant chain (independent, small/regional, or national) • Will likely involve ES Buildings and ES Small Business • Document best practices and lessons learned and share those cross-industry • Continue to research other non-restaurant commercial kitchen opptys. for installation of specific qualified products or bundle/suite • Schools and hospitality sectors • Follow the utility rebate funds, direct install programs and sector-focused outreach
CFS FY 06 Goals • Early FY 07 (fall 2006) 2-6 EEPS partners/utilities are actively promoting ENERGY STAR qualified CFS equipment to their customers • Via equipment-focused rebates/incentives • Later FY 07 (spring 2007) 1-3 EEPS partners/utilities are actively promoting an efficient commercial kitchen via ES’ approach (the advanced kitchen package) to their customers • Primarily restaurants, but also could include schools or large institutional accounts • Via new construction or commercial rebates/incentives.
New Specification Prospects • Battery Charging Systems* • Complement to EPSs • Seeking CEC adoption • Commercial dishwashers • Research ongoing on water and energy • 1st draft target May ’06 • Ice Makers* • Research on water/energy “tradeoff” • Final document Nov ’05 * Product addressed in EPAct 2005
Revised Specifications – 2006 • Imaging Equipment: values for products tested using TEC and OM approaches, includes power supply requirement, excludes grandfathering. • Milestones: • Test data due (November 1, 2005) • Distributed second draft specification (December 2005) • Released final specification (April 2006) • Effective date (March 2007) • Industry Concerns/Issues: • Integrated digital front-ends • Allowances for networked equipment • Duplex requirements • Functional adder • Remanufactured components • Recovery time
Revised Specifications – 2006 Priorities • Vending retrofits
EPS -- Where Are We? • Launched specification in January 2005 • Have recruited 5 end use product manufacturers (EUPM’s) • Have approached 40 to 50 EUPMs overall • Developed graphic for use on packaging (Samsung will be first to use – 2 cell phones in Nov. 05) • Identified target products for manufacturer recruitment (portable electronics products) • Begun general media – raise awareness and recruit Partners • Recruited 18 EPS makers (including 6 of the top 7 makers), representing over 50% of the market, have become ENERGY STAR Partners and supply qualified EPSs. Therefore, active recruitment of EPS makers not a major focus.
EPS -- What We’ve Learned • Recruiting new partners can be slow (unfamiliarity with ES, legal issues, # of contacts) • Partner requirements add some obstacles • Label • Presence of English text (HP) • Label overload (brought by several partners) • Acceptability of graphic (Apple) • Efficiency levels • 230V requirements excluding many products • Some manufacturers may not be worth recruiting (Nokia example – already have efficient EPSs, won’t use graphic, legal concerns) • Need case studies and more partners for more effective PR outreach • EUPM Recruitment will drive success not EPS manufacturers
Overall Strategy and Activities • Current and Near term: • Directly recruit EUPMs using first to market category tactics • Develop somewhat flexible solutions for use of graphic and alternatives • Develop case studies highlighting success, use of graphic, and benefits to partner • Media outreach • Mid term: • Work closely with participating EUPMs to build number of products and to label them • Begin creating customer preference for products with ENERGY STAR EPSs through PR • Design of recognition and publicity elements • Redesign Website to a recruitment tool • Recruit direct retailer of EPSs (e.g. Targus) • Long term (Expand Market): • Begin working with retailers • Integrate into FEMP specification