Consumer electronics made quite a splash at the Energy Efficiency Global Forum & Exposition (EE Global) in Washington, DC—but not in a good way.
Home electronics devices from plasma-based TVs to personal computers and more are being targeted by energy efficiency advocates as energy hogs.
According to the Consumer Electronics Association, consumer electronics account for 11 percent of household energy use and 3 percent of all power used in the United States.
That may not sound like much, but Michael Howard, senior vice president of research and development for the Electric Power Research Institute (ERPI), says a 46-inch plasma consumes 300 watts, totaling 602 kilowatt hours of energy a year. By comparison, an older 36-inch CRT TV consumes 133 watts and 267 kilowatt hours a year. A cable TV set-top box consumes 30 watts of energy and is always on, racking up 262 kilowatt hours of electricity annually.
And the problem isn’t just inefficient electronics on their “on” states. Many consumer electronics still pull power from a home’s electrical outlet when turned “off.” This is called standby or vampire power, and includes AC-to-DC transformers in computers and external transformers used by portable computers, electrical chargers, and virtually any consumer electronics device with a remote control. The IR (infrared) sensor remains on to hunt for a signal.
Douglas Johnson, CEA’s senior director of policy and international affairs, says standby power accounts for one quarter of consumer electronic energy consumption. Other studies have estimated that standby power to use as much as 13 percent of a household’s electricity use.
No surprise, then, that many believe it is time to make consumer electronics devices more energy efficient. “A lot of this [can be rectified via] design changes. A lot of existing designs have this [standby power mode], and don’t need to be on,” says James McMahon, head of the energy analysis department of the environmental energy technologies division at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. “We’re trying to make it easier for consumers to turn things completely off.”
Some progress is being made. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission is reportedly considering a way to label power on TVs. New requirements for external AC/DC transformers are in the works. And Energy Star, the program for labeling energy efficient products and operated by the Department of Energy, is revising the spec for set-top boxes. Many TVs are also Energy Star rated for consuming less than 1 watt in power in standby mode. However, Energy Star is a voluntary program for manufacturers, and many energy efficiency advocates want mandatory standards.
The CEA, however, opposes mandatory energy efficiency standards for consumer electronics, due to the possibility of the standards hindering the advances in technology. In addition, the vast range of electronics and their varying energy needs makes having one comprehensive standard impractical, says Johnson.
“Where the industry does need to take initiative is in energy disclosures,” he adds.
Looks like a battle is brewing on regulating electronics power, but we can at least look forward to some improvements in the energy efficiency of our electronics. Stay tuned, but maybe not on your high-wattage TV.

Prentice,
Keep talking - your just making your ignorance all the more obvious. We are very wasteful in this country especialy when it comes to luxury items. And science has proven that everything from cars to the paint you use on your walls and how it is applied DOES damage the earth. Many of these scientists have been funded to do this research by people like you who wanted to disprove it.
transformers do not change ac to dc ...
so you have a lot of stuff, but not any fundamental knowledge ...
also, what i see on this site is pure fluff for people with only money, and little understanding or interest in real futures
beyond say - a couple years?
- r
.
Prentice, you can choose to be a wasteful as your conscience and your finances allow but you are wrong about several things. The one I’ll address is the ‘there is no “consensus”’ lie. In fact there is a consensus that global climate change is happening and that human activities are a contributing factor if not a root cause. The report out of the IPCC is actually very conservative, excluding many factors because of political objections by some of the countries that sponsored scientists on the panel. I.e., you can take the final IPCC report to be a sort of best case scenario. Advancing technologies will help but the majority of them will be ineffective without social and political changes, which many folks such as yourself do not have the will to undertake.
JEEZ, this is seriously getting ridiculous, I mean this global warming stuff, everywhere in life it keeps popping up. How do these people expect us to live!? This global warming stuff is nothing but the religion that is environmentalism and about these people wanting to control our lives, or to make us feel like we are committing the ultimate in sin or something. I am seriously so sick of hearing and reading about it. LET PEOPLE LIVE THEIR LIVES. If we need more energy, we can build more coal plants. I seriously cannot believe they want to make energy efficiency mandatory for electronics products. They don’t pollute like a car! Oh, but it’s “bad for the Earth.” These people expect you to not use any kind of technology, ride a bike to work, and live in the smallest home possible! ANY kind of material indulgence is sinful. I don’t need the government’s tongue shoved up my #### to live my life. The fact that I choose to drive what is essentially an oversized station wagon that gets 12 miles to the gallon, live in a large home, and fill said home with numerous electronics products, is ultimately none of their business.
If global warming is a problem (which after extensive research I have come to conclude it is just a big farce, and contray to popular believe BTW, no there is no “consensus” on it either), then we can handle said problem by ADVANCING technology, not by trying to contrain people’s lifestyles with draconian regulations.
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Mood lighting, stretch-out seating and privacy make these home theaters a Valentine’s Day treat.
My bad on AC-to-DC “transformers” in the article. I should have referred to them as adapters.
-sc