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NEMA Files Motion To Block California Light Bulb Rules

NEMA Files Motion To Block California Light Bulb Rules

The National Electrical Manufacturer’s Association (NEMA) will be filing an order in U.S. District Court, Eastern District of California, in an attempt to block three proposed California Energy Commission rules about light bulbs.  The order asks that the CEC follow the EPCA (Energy Policy and Conservation Act) and remain in compliance with it.  NEMA supports the EPCA, and believes the new standards are out of compliance.

From a previous www.tedmag.com story posted December 18, 2015:

The National Electrical Manufacturers Association (NEMA) called on the California Energy Commission (CEC) today to ensure that California consumers have access to the most efficient, cost-effective, and preferred LED bulbs currently on the market. A proposal under consideration at the CEC that could be voted on as early as January 13, 2016, would reverse that trend with specific color requirements for LED lightbulbs, NEMA asserted in comments to the CEC earlier this month.

“While urging the CEC to revise proposed energy-efficiency targets for decorative, reflector, and directional LED lights, NEMA agrees that the CEC-proposed starting energy-efficiency target for omnidirectional LED bulbs is aggressive but nevertheless achievable. However, the proposed CEC color specifications for LED bulbs go too far,” said NEMA President & CEO Kevin Cosgriff. “Neither consumers nor manufacturers will benefit from the heavy hand of unnecessary, over-prescriptive regulation that forces California consumers to buy more expensive, less efficient LEDs. The energy-efficiency targets for each type of LED bulb must strike the appropriate balance between efficiency, product availability, and consumer cost.”

If the regulations are adopted without the NEMA proposed revisions, California consumers will have fewer LED options, and LEDs will be noticeably more expensive and less energy-efficient than other lighting options, which will undermine California’s energy-efficiency objectives. “LED lighting is still early in a technology transformation that promises many benefits to consumers in California and elsewhere in the United States, and that innovation has rapidly delivered quality products at lower prices,” said Cosgriff. “The CEC should not assume that one color specification suits all. Consumers deserve choices, and they should expect their government to assist in making them available.”

Refer to NEMA’s fact sheet for more information on the proposed specifications.

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