by gg3 » Sun 24 Dec 2006, 06:25:23
This is where my green streak and my libertarian streak always get into a fight with each other.
I don't object to performance standards, but I mightily object to regulations that dictate how those standards should be met.
And I also ferociously and violently object to regulations that result in over-complicated and over-automated products that are designed for idiots, impossible to modify, and nearly impossible to maintain.
For example, take the washing machine. Modern front-loaders are certainly efficient. But they are mechanically complicated and computer-controlled, and the controller circuit board is an obvious point of failure. In contrast I have a "twin tub" washer that's basically 1950s technology with no computerized anything, and uses half the water of a conventional washer and 0.07 KWH of electricity to do a 6-1/2 lb. load. My machine won't qualify for Energy Star because all the controls are mechanical: someone could theoretically use the machine in a wasteful manner if s/he really wanted to. However it's more efficient than most of what's presently on the market and it's so simple that it will proably last 20 years.
Similar dynamics apply to other types of appliances, and to automobiles as well. What happens is that the regulators require everything to be designed for people with two-digit IQs, and the manufacturers happily comply, and people with decent brains in their heads are forced to bear with the outcomes.
It would be simpler and more direct to just go ahead and ration energy and water supplies, tax the hell out of carbon emissions, charge for refuse collection based on weekly weight (this is already possible and being done in some places), and let the free market work out the technical details. Everyone gets so much gasoline per week, so much electricity per month, with adjustments for household size and for factors such as electric automobiles, and then they can buy & sell their rations on the open market. Meanwhile, manufacturers come up with clever new stuff (or resurrect clever old stuff like the twin-tub washing machine) that enables smart people to maximize efficiency and sell their surplus rations. Win-win-win.
Here's an example of how that works.
Note the following numbers are all rough estimates, one of these days I am going to take a Kill-a-Watt power meter to a TV store and make actual measurements.
Back in the good old days, a "big" television was one with a 32" diagonal screen color picture tube. This would consume between 300 and 600 watts while it was on.
Now if you take a 32" diagonal picture and use flat-screen technology, you can probably do that for 100 to 150 watts: excellent, a 50% savings with no sacrifice.
But instead we have now got 60" and 80" and in some cases 100" flat screen TVs, which are back up to 300, 600, and in some cases over 1,000 watts. In a case like that, the 300 watt 60" TV gets the Energy Star for its category.
So with the present regulatory approach, we just got nowhere.
With the rationing approach, we get an incentive for people to stick to the 32" picture and cut their power consumption by half, and sell the surplus rations on the open market.
As for those huge TVs, the place for them is in community auditoriums and micro-theatres where groups of people can congregate to watch. And if people hung out after to talk about what they just watched, it would tend to enhance community rather than fragmenting people into their own isolated living rooms.