Appliance Standards in Central America
Costa Rica, 14.03.2007 - Dr. Marianne Osterkorn
In February, Mexican finance minister Agustín Carstens made a surprise announcement that his country could become a fully developed nation within 20 years. He compared the nation’s position with that of Spain and Ireland in the 1980s: “there are countries that in 20 years have carried out significant changes in their productive structure, per-capita income, in the well-being of the population and I believe that Mexico is in a position to do something similar,” he predicted.
Improved competitiveness, a stronger inflation and growth record and a rush of investor optimism all confirm that the nation is resting on a much firmer economic platform than it was during the 1990s, so there is some justification for this statement. Experts have noted that much of this economic recovery can be traced to successive governments’ patient construction of strong regulatory and technical foundations. Close attention to production and energy inefficiencies acted as one of the many key building blocks.
Through increasingly stringent product standards, energy consumption was slashed, leaving more funds in the nation’s coffers for other uses. FIDE, the national electricity power saving fund formed in the 1990s, reports that it had saved 4046 GWh by December 2005 – the equivalent of power consumed by three Mexican states.
The government managed this through simple efficiency actions backed up by rigorous rules that, for instance, led to the substitution of millions of conventional lamps with more efficient ones. Manufacturers have become more competitive due to disciplines such as these. For instance, the energy consumed in
Blank slate
Other Central American countries are starting with a blank slate. For one thing, most organisations and households have never considered saving energy: “the issue of how to become more competitive by using more efficient energy is not part of our culture – this is a common barrier we are up against”, explains José Ma. Blanco, the Regional Director of BUN-CA.
BUN-CA and the Renewable Energy and Energy-Efficiency Partnership (REEEP) are working together to stamp the first characters of an energy efficiency motif into the heart of the nation’s political and commercial establishment. All parties involved in the regional strategy have benefited from the expertise of the Collaborative Labelling and Appliance Program (CLASP), an international body advising governments and industry all over the world on standards and labelling.
But Blanco says that public agencies “lack experience” and that there is not enough of a standards culture in the first place, for any industry. “There are standards agencies, but they have focused their actions mainly connected to safety and food issues”, says Michael McNeil, a researcher from
For instance, products with higher energy performance will often incur higher import duties. Small and medium-sized companies need to be persuaded and helped, while there is also a lack of baseline energy data. Governments may be concerned by issues they consider to be more pressing.
On the positive side, there is no backlog of inefficient products, and an opportunity exists to take advantage of lessons already learned by their
Using the approach of a Minimum Efficiency Performance Standard (MEPS) combined with an Endorsement Label indicating which indicate the very highest efficiency models, minimum efficiency thresholds are set and updated regularly. A Comparative Labelling program could also be put in place, which rates the relative efficiency of all products in a way that’s clear to consumers.
The role of the appliance producers and major importers could be critical to the success of the region’s initiative which is only at the seed-planting stage. To a certain extent, the deployment of standards can help resolve some of the thorniest contradictions faced by developing countries and aid agencies. Developing countries want their economies to grow further, yet they are faced with international constraints on high energy demand. Forcing product standardisation in the earlier stages could help companies become more productive and more competitive more quickly.
Change agents
Executives from white goods producers in
Project managers at REEEP and BUN-CA note that, due to the commercial advantages of the new standards, air conditioning and industrial motor producers could be key energy champions in the seven countries targeted by the initiative:
Fifty six per cent of electricity consumption in
“Producers are actually helping to drive standards in
Standards have benefits to consumers, too. End users save money by using efficient appliances, and they will be keen to cut their bills because thermal power prices have been rising. “By reducing consumption at the end of the chain, Central American countries can displace investment, especially during peak hours,” remarks José Ma. Blanco.
Effective
On a macro level, there are yet more good reasons for cutting back on energy use. In his statement last February, Agustin Carstens, Mexican Finance Minister, pointed out that he believed
Reducing oil consumption leaves oil in reserve for future years, thus allowing more time for alternative technologies to develop. It is also a cheaper option than new technology for combating climate change and energy security problems.
According to The Rocky Mountain Institute calculations, a 2.5 decrease in