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Programs Page --> Energy Policy --> Federal Energy Policy Act of 2005

Federal Energy Policy Act of 2005

Congress undertook omnibus energy legislation beginning in 2001, following issuance of the President's National Energy Policy report. The House of Representatives passed comprehensive energy legislation in August 2001 and, after an inconclusive conference in 2002, voted out a similar bill in April 2003. The Senate passed a bill in April 2002 and re-voted the same bill in 2003. The 2003 conference report failed to win passage in the Senate.

The 109th Congress took up the energy bill again in 2005, with a House version passing in April and a Senate version passing in June. A conference committee met in July and with remarkable speed sent a conference report to the floor the last week of July. The Senate and House both approved the bill with substantial majorities that same week, and the President signed the bill on August 8.

Comprehensive summary of the final bill

Energy Bill Analyses

More on tax incentives

ACEEE Technical Reports - EPAct 2005

Press Releases

Efficiency Title. The final bill includes most of the efficiency title from the 2003 bill, plus several new provisions—primarily more equipment efficiency standards, based on consensus agreements. Key provisions include:

Equipment efficiency standards

  • Sets consensus equipment efficiency standards on 16 products—exit signs, traffic lights, building transformers, torchiere lighting fixtures, compact fluorescent lamps, commercial unit heaters, residential dehumidifiers, commercial refrigerators and freezers, large commercial air conditioners, commercial ice makers, commercial clothes washers, pedestrian signals, mercury vapor lamp ballasts, fluorescent lamp ballasts, pre-rinse spray valves (used in restaurants), and residential ceiling fan light kits.
  • Calls for the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) to set efficiency standards via a rulemaking on three products—external power supplies, battery chargers, and refrigerated beverage vending machines.
  • Requires DOE to regularly report to Congress when efficiency standard rulemakings are behind schedule, including steps being taken to get back onto schedule.

    Other provisions

  • CHP—directs states to consider adopting model interconnection standards.
  • Public awareness campaign—authorizes a major campaign on how to save energy and the benefits of doing so.
  • Appliance labeling—directs the Federal Trade Commission to review and revise the Energy Guide labeling program to make it more effective.
  • Energy efficiency resource standards—authorizes a pilot program with states and calls for a study with the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners on state and regional policies to promote energy efficiency.
  • Industrial voluntary commitments—directs DOE to set up a program to encourage and recognize industrial facilities that make voluntary commitments to improve energy intensity.
  • Building energy codes—expands an existing technical assistance program to states to include a component on code implementation.
  • Research and development—authorizes continued and new programs in many different sectors.
  • Federal facilities—updates savings goals for federal facilities and authorizes a variety of new and continued activities to achieve these goals. Extends authorization of Energy Savings Performance Contracts for 10 years.
  • High performance public buildings—authorizes a grant program to states to assist local government in improving the efficiency of their buildings.
  • Appliance rebates—authorizes a program to co-fund appliance rebate programs established by states.
  • Air conditioner maintenance education—directs DOE to conduct an education campaign on the benefits of properly conducted maintenance.
  • Public housing—continues and improves a variety of programs to reduce energy use in public housing.
  • Real time pricing—directs state utility commissions to consider establishing real-time pricing programs in their states.
  • Daylight savings time—extends daylight savings time by one month (one week in the spring, three weeks in the fall).
Tax Title. The final bill contains a blend of the House and Senate provisions on federal tax incentives for a variety of energy supply and energy efficiency technologies and practices. Total efficiency-related tax incentives totaled about $2.3 billion in the final bill, down from about $5.5 billion in the Senate bill. The final bill includes incentives for:
  • High-efficiency vehicles, either hybrid or diesel, with credits on a sliding scale based on efficiency; maximum credit for light-duty vehicles expected to be about $3,400 for Prius-level performance.
  • New homes, with $2,000 for builders making homes using 50% less energy than the International Energy Conservation Code (IECC) and $1,000 for manufactured homes meeting ENERGY STAR® criteria.
  • Existing homes, with 10% of cost up to a $500 limit for:
    • Insulation and envelope improvements meeting IECC specifications
    • Windows meeting IECC specifications, with a cap of $200 per homeowner
    • Central air conditioners or heat pumps meeting 2006 Consortium for Energy Efficiency specifications (expected to be 15 SEER and 13 EER), capped at $300
    • Furnaces and boilers with Annual Fuel Utilization Efficiency of 95 or better, capped at $150
    • Water heaters with Energy Factor of .80 or better, capped at $300
    • Heat pump water heaters with an Energy Factor of 2.0 or better, capped at $300
    • Ground source heat pumps meeting specified performance levels, capped at $300
  • Commercial buildings, with a $1.80 per square foot deduction for buildings exceeding ASHRAE 90.1-2001 standards by 50% or more, with prorated deductions available for individual systems.
  • Manufacturer credits for high-efficiency appliances (including refrigerators, clothes washers, and dishwashers) of up to $175, with a per-manufacturer cap of $75 million over the credit period.

Vehicle Fuel Economy. Neither the House nor the Senate elected to take any significant action regarding passenger vehicle fuel economy. However, the conference report marginally weakened the existing CAFÉ situation by (1) imposing new constraints on the federal agency that conducts CAFÉ rulemakings and (2) extending the "dual-fuel loophole" that gives manufacturers CAFÉ credit for making vehicles that can burn an alcohol fuel, even if the vehicle never uses such fuel. ACEEE analysis indicates that full use of this loophole could erode actual fuel economy of the U.S. fleet by up to 5%.

Electricity Title. In the electricity title, the final bill contains new Public Utilities Regulatory Practices Act (PURPA) compromise language that sustains the ability of combined heat and power facilities and other non-utility power generators to sell power into utility grids. However, the electricity title lacks any other meaningful efficiency provisions, such as a public benefits fund or an efficiency performance standard for utilities. Such provisions could have more than doubled the bill's estimated energy savings.

Oil Savings. The final bill also leaves out a major oil savings provision in the Senate bill, which would have required the President to take steps that would save one million barrels of oil annually by the year 2013. This provision would have increased the oil savings estimate for the final bill almost tenfold.

Estimated Energy Savings. Overall, the conference bill will save only about half the energy that the Senate bill would have saved and only about one-tenth the oil savings of the Senate bill. However, ACEEE estimates that the bill saves less than one-quarter of the energy relative to ACEEE's earlier recommendations, which included robust efficiency provisions missing from the final bill (e.g., fuel economy standards and electricity efficiency provisions). The bill will save about 2% of U.S. energy use in 2020, compared to about 10% for a bill with our recommended efficiency provisions.

Visit http://www.aceee.org/press/0507confbill.htm for ACEEE's comments on and a summary of savings estimates of the final bill.


For more information contact:
Steven Nadel, Executive Director

 

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