98-29156. Energy Conservation Program for Consumer Products: Fluorescent Lamp Ballasts Energy Conservation Standards  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 210 (Friday, October 30, 1998)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 58330-58331]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-29156]
    
    
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    Proposed Rules
                                                    Federal Register
    ________________________________________________________________________
    
    This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains notices to the public of 
    the proposed issuance of rules and regulations. The purpose of these 
    notices is to give interested persons an opportunity to participate in 
    the rule making prior to the adoption of the final rules.
    
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    Federal Register / Vol. 63, No. 210 / Friday, October 30, 1998 / 
    Proposed Rules
    
    [[Page 58330]]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
    
    Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
    
    10 CFR Part 430
    
    [Docket Number EE-RM-97-500]
    RIN 1904-AA75
    
    
    Energy Conservation Program for Consumer Products: Fluorescent 
    Lamp Ballasts Energy Conservation Standards
    
    AGENCY: Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Department of 
    Energy.
    
    ACTION: Notice of limited reopening of the record and opportunity for 
    public comment.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Department of Energy reopens the record of its rulemaking 
    to revise energy conservation standards for fluorescent lamp ballasts 
    under the Energy Policy and Conservation Act. This notice provides an 
    opportunity for public comment regarding the Department's consideration 
    of consumers who choose electronic ballast T-8 systems over electronic 
    ballast T-12 systems and consumers who choose electronic ballasts over 
    cathode cutout ballasts.
    
    DATES: Comments must be received on or before November 30, 1998.
    
    ADDRESSES: Written comments are welcome. Please submit 10 copies (no 
    faxes) to: Brenda Edwards-Jones, U. S. Department of Energy, Office of 
    Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Energy Conservation Program for 
    Consumer Products: Fluorescent Lamp Ballasts, Docket No. EE-RM-97-500, 
    1000 Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20585-0121.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Carl Adams, U.S. Department of Energy, 
    Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, EE-43, 1000 
    Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20585-0121, (202) 586-9127, 
    or Eugene Margolis, Esq., U.S. Department of Energy, Office of General 
    Counsel, GC-72, 1000 Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20585, 
    (202) 586-9507.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Pursuant to section 325 of the Energy Policy 
    and Conservation Act (EPCA), 42 U.S.C. 6295, the Department of Energy 
    (DOE) proposed to revise the energy conservation standards applicable 
    to fluorescent lamp ballasts, as well as a variety of other consumer 
    products. 59 FR 10464 (March 4, 1994). On January 31, 1995, the 
    Department published a rulemaking determination that, based on comments 
    received, it would issue a revised notice of proposed rulemaking for 
    fluorescent lamp ballasts. 60 FR 5880 (January 31, 1995). Section 
    325(o)(2) requires that any amended standard be designed to achieve the 
    maximum improvement in energy efficiency that is technologically 
    feasible and economically justified. 42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(2).
        During the conduct of several workshops and in other discussions 
    with stakeholders , two issues have arisen that the Department wishes 
    to notice to the public prior to the issuance of a revised proposed 
    rule.
    
    Issue 1
    
        In the analyses for the 1994 Proposed Rule, the February, 1996, 
    Draft Report and the July, 1997, Draft Report regarding the potential 
    impacts of possible energy efficiency levels for fluorescent lamp 
    ballasts, the Department conducted the analyses by comparing magnetic 
    ballast T-12 systems to electronic ballast T-12 systems and magnetic T-
    8 systems to electronic T-8 systems when evaluating efficiency levels 
    where the consumer is faced with standard levels requiring electronic 
    ballasts. The Department was silent on any comparison of magnetic T-12 
    systems to electronic ballast T-8 systems. The analyses were conducted 
    in a manner which essentially assumed all consumers of magnetic T-12 
    ballast systems would replace them with electronic T-12 ballast 
    systems. Prior to 18 months ago, there had been no comments regarding 
    the validity or impact of conducting the analysis in this manner.
        Current industry data indicates that approximately 94 percent of 
    consumers who choose electronic ballasts choose T-8 systems. DOE has 
    now received a number of comments that by only considering consumers 
    purchasing T-12 ballast systems, the Department would not capture the 
    full range of impacts likely to result from the rulemaking. During the 
    March 18, 1997, workshop on the Revised Life Cycle Cost and Engineering 
    Analysis of Fluorescent Lamp Ballasts, the Alliance to Save Energy, 
    Natural Resources Defense Council and American Council for an Energy 
    Efficient Economy (ACEEE) commented that the Department, in considering 
    standards at the electronic ballast efficiency level, should include 
    consideration of the benefits or costs that result when consumers 
    choose to purchase electronic ballast T-8 systems instead of electronic 
    ballast T-12 systems. This issue was raised again by ACEEE in its 
    written comments of October 2, 1997, on the Draft Report on Potential 
    Impact of Possible Energy Efficiency Levels for Fluorescent Lamp 
    Ballasts (ACEEE, No. 14) and again in its written comments of June 5, 
    1998, in response to the Public Workshop on Possible Impacts of Energy 
    Efficiency Standards for Fluorescent Lamp Ballasts conducted on April 
    28, 1998. (ACEEE, No. 24).
        In consideration of these comments, this issue was further 
    discussed with the National Electrical Manufacturers Association (NEMA) 
    at a meeting on June 9-10, 1998. At this meeting, DOE and NEMA members 
    discussed ways to compare an electronic ballast T-12 system to an 
    electronic ballast T-8 system, including how such a comparison would 
    require an additional normalization step to account for the lamp lumen 
    differences. Preliminary impact analyses using a normalization approach 
    which uses the mean characteristics representative of the most popular 
    T-12 and T-8 lamps indicates that a shift from T-12 lamps with 
    electronic ballasts to T-8 lamps with electronic ballasts would yield 
    significant additional energy and life cycle cost savings. Any such 
    market shift in lamp usage caused by a ballast standard could also have 
    an impact on lamp manufacturers.
        In a letter to the Department, dated October 16, 1998, NEMA stated 
    that DOE should not consider the impact of any shift from T-12 systems 
    to T-8 systems because any additional benefits would accrue from system 
    efficiencies of the ballast and the lamp.
    
    [[Page 58331]]
    
        The Department believes its analysis of the impacts of a potential 
    standard level on consumers, manufacturers and the nation, as 
    prescribed by EPCA, requires the analysis to compare the marketplace 
    before and after standards and to measure the impacts of changes. DOE 
    believes this policy is consistent with previous rulemakings such as 
    the Department's consideration of a possible shift from gas mobile home 
    furnaces to electric heat if the gas mobile home furnace standards were 
    increased.
        Further, the Department believes, based on current sales, if a 
    standard required consumers of magnetic ballast T-12 systems to 
    purchase electronic ballasts, it is likely that many if not most of 
    these consumers would choose to purchase electronic ballast T-8 
    systems. In determining the likely benefits and costs for the nation 
    and the likely impacts on manufacturers, the Department intends to 
    explore a range of market scenarios using different assumptions about 
    the likely effects of a new DOE standard on ballasts on the market 
    shares of T-8 and T-12 systems. Additionally, the Department intends to 
    analyze both the range of life cycle costs for consumers who choose 
    electronic ballast T-12 systems and the range of life cycle costs for 
    consumers who choose electronic ballast T-8 systems. By this notice, 
    the Department is soliciting public comment on whether a market shift 
    from T-12 systems to T-8 systems is likely to occur if an energy 
    conservation standard were set at a level requiring electronic 
    ballasts, the extent of any such shift in terms of a percentage and 
    whether any such shift should be considered in determining the impact 
    of an energy conservation standard set at a level requiring electronic 
    ballasts on consumers, manufacturers and the nation.
    
    Issue 2
    
        In the analyses for the 1994 Proposed Rule, the February, 1996, 
    Draft Report and the July, 1997, Draft Report regarding the potential 
    impacts of possible energy efficiency levels for fluorescent lamp 
    ballasts, the Department conducted the analysis by comparing magnetic 
    ballasts to cathode cutout ballasts when evaluating efficiency levels 
    where the consumer is faced with standard levels requiring cathode 
    cutout ballasts. The Department was silent on any comparison of cathode 
    cutout ballasts to electronic ballasts. The analyses were conducted in 
    a manner which essentially assumed all consumers of magnetic ballasts 
    would replace them with cathode cutout ballasts. Currently cathode 
    cutout ballasts represent approximately one percent of the magnetic 
    ballast market.
        In discussions with manufacturers after the June 9-10, 1998 meeting 
    at NEMA, manufacturers stated a belief that when faced with such a 
    standard, many consumers would choose electronic ballasts instead of 
    cathode cutout ballasts. They indicated this choice would increase the 
    impact on manufacturers who produce magnetic ballasts and requested 
    changes in the manufacturer impact analysis, as specifically, the 
    Government Regulatory Impact Model (GRIM), to account for this possible 
    shift.
        The Department believes its analysis of the impacts of a potential 
    standard level on consumers, manufacturers and the nation, as 
    prescribed by EPCA, requires the analysis to compare the marketplace 
    before and after standards and to measure the impacts of changes. DOE 
    believes this policy is consistent with previous rulemakings such as 
    the Department's consideration of a possible shift from gas mobile home 
    furnaces to electric heat if the gas mobile home furnace standards were 
    increased.
        Given the small current market share of cathode cutout ballasts, 
    the Department believes it would be reasonable to assume that with an 
    energy conservation standard set at the cathode cutout level, many 
    consumers would choose electronic ballasts, even though the cathode 
    cutout ballast would then be the lowest cost ballast. It would also be 
    reasonable to assume that many or most of the consumers who choose 
    electronic ballasts will also choose to convert from T-12 to T-8 lamps 
    at the time of ballast replacement. In determining the likely benefits 
    and costs for the nation and the likely impacts on manufacturers, the 
    Department intends to explore a range of market scenarios using 
    different assumptions about the likely effects of a new DOE standard on 
    ballasts on the market shares of electronic and cathode cutout 
    ballasts. Additionally, the Department intends to analyze both the 
    range of life cycle costs for consumers who choose electronic ballasts 
    and the range of life cycle costs for consumers who choose cathode 
    cutout ballasts. By this notice, the Department is soliciting public 
    comment on whether a market shift from cathode cutout ballasts to 
    electronic ballasts is likely to occur if an energy conservation 
    standard were set at a level requiring cathode cutout ballasts, the 
    extent of any such shift in terms of a percentage, the percentage of 
    those consumers choosing electronic ballasts who would choose T-8 
    systems and whether any shift should be considered in determining the 
    impact of an energy conservation standard set at a level requiring 
    cathode cutout ballasts on consumers, manufacturers and the nation.
    
    Public Comment
    
        DOE seeks comments on the following:
         In considering standards set at the level of electronic 
    ballasts, whether a market shift from T-12 systems to T-8 systems is 
    likely to occur, the extent of any such shift in terms of a percentage 
    and whether any such shift should be considered in determining the 
    impact of an energy conservation standard on consumers, manufacturers 
    and the nation.
         In considering standards that would require T-12 cathode 
    cutout ballasts, whether a market shift from cathode cutout ballasts to 
    electronic ballasts is likely to occur, the extent of any such shift in 
    terms of a percentage, the percentage of those consumers choosing 
    electronic ballasts who would choose T-8 systems and whether any shift 
    should be considered in determining the impact of an energy 
    conservation standard on consumers, manufacturers and the nation.
    
        Issued in Washington, D.C., on October 26, 1998.
    Dan W. Reicher,
    Assistant Secretary, Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy.
    [FR Doc. 98-29156 Filed 10-29-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6450-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
10/30/1998
Department:
Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Office
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Notice of limited reopening of the record and opportunity for public comment.
Document Number:
98-29156
Dates:
Comments must be received on or before November 30, 1998.
Pages:
58330-58331 (2 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket Number EE-RM-97-500
RINs:
1904-AA75: Energy Efficiency Standards for Lamp Ballasts
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/1904-AA75/energy-efficiency-standards-for-lamp-ballasts
PDF File:
98-29156.pdf
CFR: (1)
10 CFR 430