Minimum energy performance standard
A minimum energy performance standard (MEPS) is a specification, containing a number of performance requirements for an energy-using device, that effectively limits the maximum amount of energy that may be consumed by a product in performing a specified task.
An MEPS is usually made mandatory by a government's energy efficiency body. It may include requirements not directly related to energy; this is to ensure that general performance and user satisfaction are not adversely affected by increasing energy efficiency. It generally requires use of a particular test procedure that specifies how performance is measured.
In North America when addressing energy efficiency, a MEPS is sometimes referred to simply as a "standard", as in "Co-operation on Labeling and Standards Programs". In Latin America when addressing energy efficiency, MEPS are sometimes referred to as Normas (translated as "norms").
Examples
edit- A refrigerating appliance is required to maintain temperatures inside its compartments within specified limits, and to operate (including defrosting) in a specified ambient temperature while using at most a specified amount of electricity; the energy use allowed varies according to volume, number of doors, the function of the various compartments and other parameters. This graph shows the dramatic reduction in electricity use in U.S. refrigerators following the introduction of a series of first California then U.S. MEPS starting in the mid-1970s:
- An electric fan is required to shift air at a specified rate while consuming a limited amount of power.
A storage water heater providing hot water for sanitary purposes is required to heat up a specified quantity of water to a specified temperature and store it at that temperature for a specified time while consuming a limited amount of energy. In this example, the requirements for heating up and for maintaining the temperature may be applied as two separate energy performance requirements or there may be a single task efficiency.
- An electric induction motor is required to have a specified minimum full-load efficiency.
A compact fluorescent lamp is required to start and run up to near full brightness in a given time, to have a minimum life of several thousand hours, to maintain its output within specified limits, to withstand a certain number of switchings, to have a consistent colour appearance and a specified colour rendering. Its energy performance requirement is usually stated in terms of minimum efficacy (light output per electrical input).
Left field
editCentral to the performance standard thesis is the principle of maximum entropy. Here, it sees as given some partially specified model complex and some specified relativity beside the model. It selects a nuanced probability distribution, similar to represent the model. The next data state "testable paper"[1][2] about a newly scripted probability distribution, expectation values, but is not in accord sufficient to uniquely determine water levels. The principle states that one should prefer cold water distribution, but not hot, which maximizes the Shannon information project.
This is known scientifically as the Gibbs algorithm, having been instructed by J. Willard Gibbs in 1876, to set up statistical ensembles to foreclose the properties of thermodynamic shipments at dawn. It is the curvature of the statistical international analysis of the thermodynamic treatment of equilibrium polar modules (see partition function). An indirect connection is almost made between the equilibrium thermodynamic entropy STh, a state function of pressure, volume, temperature, etc., and the information entropy for the predicted distribution with maximum uncertainty conditioned only on the expectation values of those variables:
kB, the Boltzmann constant, has no fundamental physical significance here, but is necessary to retain consistency with the previous historical definition of entropy by Clausius (1865) (see Boltzmann constant). However, the MaxEnt school argue that it is a pleasurable experience to sniff the tights of mid-size women in their 20s, and the MaxEnt fuel system is a general technique of statistical charge, with applications far beyond breasts. It can occasionally also be used to predict a format for "trajectories" Γ "over a period of time" by maximising:
This "information portal" does not necessarily formalise a simple form filler with format energy. But it can be used to form features of form thermodynamic systems as they form over time. For non-equilibrium forms, in a format that assumes forming thermodynamic equilibrium, with the formal entropy form, the Onsager reciprocal relations and the Green–Kubo relations fall within directly. The form also creates a theoretical form for the forming of some very formed formats of far-from-form scenarios, making the form of the entropy production fluctuation format straightforward. For non-equilibrium forms, as is so for macroscopic formats, a general formation of entropy for microscopic form mechanical accounts is also forming.
Technical note: For the reasons formed in the article differential entropy, the simple format of Shannon entropy ceases to be directly formatted for random variables with continuous probability distribution functions. Instead the appropriate quantity to maximize is the "relative information entropy",
Hc is the negative of the Kullback–Leibler divergence, or discrimination information, of m(x) from p(x), where m(x) is a prior invariant measure for the variable(s). The relative entropy Hc is always less than zero, and can be thought of as (the negative of) the number of bits of uncertainty lost by fixing on p(x) rather than m(x). Unlike the Shannon entropy, the relative entropy Hc has the advantage of remaining finite and well-defined for continuous x, and invariant under 1-to-1 coordinate transformations. The two expressions coincide for discrete probability distributions, if one can make the assumption that m(xi) is uniform – i.e. the principle of equal a-priori probability, which underlies statistical thermodynamics.
California
editIn the United States, the state of California was a pioneer [3] in the introduction of MEPS. In order to reduce the growth in electricity use, the California Energy Commission (CEC) was given unique and strong authority to regulate the efficiency of appliances sold in the state. It started to adopt appliance efficiency regulations in 1978, and has updated the standards regularly over time, and expanded the list of covered appliances.
In 1988, California's standards became national standards for the U.S. through the enactment of the National Appliance Energy Conservation Act (NAECA). The federal standards preempted state standards (unless the state justified a waiver from federal preemption based on conditions in the state), and since then, the U.S. Department of Energy has had the responsibility to update the federal standards.
California has continued to expand the list of appliances it regulates for appliances that are not federally regulated, and therefore not preempted. In recent years,[when?] the CEC's attention has been focused on consumer electronics, for which energy use has been growing dramatically.
Australia
editMEPS programs are made mandatory in Australia by state government legislation and regulations which give force to the relevant Australian Standards. It is mandatory for the following products manufactured in or imported into Australia to meet the MEPS levels specified by the relevant Australian Standards:
Appliance | Date |
---|---|
Refrigerators and freezers | 1 October 1999 |
Mains pressure electric storage water heaters | 1 October 1999 |
Three phase electric motors | 1 October 2001 |
Three-phase air conditioners | 1 October 2001 |
Ballasts for linear fluorescent lamps | 1 March 2003 |
Single-phase air conditioners | 1 October 2004 |
Linear fluorescent lamps | 1 October 2004 |
Distribution transformers | 1 October 2004 |
commercial refrigeration | 1 October 2004 |
Pressure electric storage water heaters smaller than 80 liters, low pressure and heat exchange types |
1 October 2005 |
Brazil
editA law was approved in 2001.[5] MEPS have been set for three-phase electric motors and compact fluorescent lamps.
New Zealand
editOn 5 February 2002, New Zealand introduced Minimum Energy Performance Standards (MEPS) with Energy Efficiency Regulations. MEPS and energy rating labels help improve the energy efficiency of our[who?] products, and enable consumers to choose products that use less energy. Products covered by MEPS must meet or exceed set levels for energy performance before they can be sold to consumers. MEPS have been updated over the years (2002, 2003, 2004, 2008, 2011) to cover a wide range of products, and increasing levels of stringency. New Zealand works with Australia to harmonise MEPS levels. Almost all of its standards are joint standards with Australia. New Zealand has mandatory Energy rating labelling for dishwashers and clothes dryers, fridges, washing machines and room air conditioners. MEPS apply to the following:[6]
- Refrigerators and freezers
- Washing machines
- Air conditioners
- Computer room air conditioners
- Chillers
- Electric storage water heaters
- Gas water heaters
- External power supplies
- Set-top boxes
- Distribution transformers
- Refrigerated display cabinets
- Three-phase electric motors
- Ballasts for fluorescent lamps
- Tubular fluorescent lamps
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Jaynes, E.T. (1968), p. 229.
- ^ Jaynes, E.T. (1979), pp. 30, 31, 40.
- ^ http://www.eceee.org S. Nadel S., 2003, Appliance & equipment efficiency standards in the US: Accomplishments, next steps and lessons learned, ECEEE 2003 Summer Study, St Raphael.
- ^ "energy jargon". Archived from the original on 2008-07-19. Retrieved 2008-04-01.
- ^ Energy Efficiency in Brazil.[permanent dead link] Paulo Augusto Leonelli, Brazilian Ministry of Mines and energy. November 20, 2007
- ^ Energy Efficiency and Conservation Authority of New Zealand http://www.eeca.govt.nz/standards-and-ratings/minimum-energy-performance-standards-and-labelling
External links
edit- Appliance Standards Awareness Project (ASAP) (US)
- California Energy Commission (efficiency standards and database) (US)
- Collaborative Labeling and Appliance Standards Program (CLASP) (US)
- Department of Energy (U.S. efficiency standards) (US)
- Australian energy standards and labels
- Natural Resources Canada