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Emissions Reduction Calculator Policy Recommendations to Obtain Pollution Credits Policy
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Clothes Washers About 80% of the energy used for washing is to heat the water. Today energy and water efficient models are available from multiple manufacturers. Horizontal washing machines offer both reduced energy and water usage. In a 1997 demonstration, the US Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory tested the effectiveness of high efficiency, horizontal axis washer technology. The high efficiency washers used about 38% less water and 56% less energy than standard efficiency models.
The graph above compares the typical energy use of vertical and horizontal axis washers at three efficiency levels: minimum National Appliance Energy Conservation Act of 1987 (NAECA), Energy Star washers, and industry best (U.S. Department of Energy) One Texas city funded bulk purchasing of horizontal washing
machines and passed on the savings to its customer base in
addition to rebate incentives from both the electric and the
gas utilities. In 2001, the 362 participants in the program
achieved 47.06 kW savings and 173.8 MWh. This resulted in
reducing NOx by over 522 lbs. per household.
Like their residential counterparts, high-efficiency commercial washers save up to 50% of energy costs and use about 30% less water. (Consortia for Energy Efficiency) A commercial clothes washer study described in the May 2000 Federal Energy Management Program's Technology Installation Review contains interesting and important results for the efficiency community. The study is the first comprehensive, field-based study of efficient family-sized commercial washers. In the laundry facilities of three nearly identical barracks, metering equipment was installed. Baseline data was gathered from the conventional machines over a two-month time period in 1997, and included 1,050 wash cycles. After the baseline metering, each laundry room was
equipped with high-efficiency machines from a different manufacturer.
Maytag, Alliance Laundry Systems, Staber and Whirlpool participated in
the study. Metering of the high-efficiency clothes washers took place
over 17 months, from February 1998 through July 1999. Findings include
that the four high-efficiency brands saved 0.06 kWh/load (23%) on motor
and controls electricity use. Annually, the machine energy savings are
140 kWh and the hot water energy savings are 8.1 million Btu/machine.
In addition, the four brands saved an average of 5.6 gallons of hot water
(62%), 11.0 gallons of cold water (42%), and 16.6 gallons of total water
(47%) per load. Annually, total water savings is 38,780 gallons/machine. |
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