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| Kateri Callahan, president of the Alliance to Save Energy, said energy efficiency must
play an even larger role in the nation’s energy future. |
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Pending federal legislation formed one component of a meeting attended by more than 40 leaders in industry, finance, research, and policy.
The event in Carlsbad, Calif., another in a series of Danfoss EnVisioneering
SM symposiums, also included discussions on climate change, energy efficiency, and refrigerants.
Robert Wilkins, president of Danfoss in North America, said, “Never before has the industry been at the forefront of so many critical global issues as it is at this moment. The economic trends we currently face are influencing collective business decisions today that will shape decades to come.”
Two speakers described climate change bills that are currently in Congress, and how the legislation, if passed, would significantly impact the industry, increasing energy-efficiency demands, and dramatically reducing the use of HFC refrigerants.
Kevin Fay, president of Alcalde & Fay, a government relations and public affairs firm focusing on atmospheric and energy policy issues, said the political environment in Washington today with Democrats gaining control of both houses of Congress and the White House means energy, energy security, and green jobs should be high on the Obama administration’s agenda, and they will likely be part of an economic stimulus bill in early 2009.
Fay stated, “I think there is tremendous opportunity in terms of energy-efficiency improvements and programs for the industry at large, if we find a way to position ourselves on that.”
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He projected that climate change legislation would
not pass before late 2009 or 2010, but pointed out that 2008 bills in
both the Senate and House of Representatives had common approaches that
could become the foundation for new legislation in the next Congress.
For example, both Senate and House bills separate HFC refrigerants from
other greenhouse gases, and establish a specific target to reduce HFC
global-warming contribution by nearly 80 percent over the next four
decades.
David McIntosh, who served as Sen. Joseph
Lieberman’s counsel and legislative assistant for energy and the
environment from April 2006 through September 2008, noted implications
legislation could have on the HVACR industry should that legislation
mandate a phase-down of HFC refrigerants. According to McIntosh, both
the Senate and House committees authoring 2008 climate change bills
recognized the important role HFC refrigerants play in today’s
high-efficiency air conditioning and refrigeration equipment, which
could temper the phase-down pressure.
McIntosh said
future energy legislation could include “mandates on new
energy-efficiency standards among manufacturers as well as subsidies
and tax incentives for the manufacturers and the purchasers of the
equipment,” suggesting the Congress and administration could look to
state initiatives as possible models for legislation, as well as
previous federal initiatives.
He also expects the
Obama administration would enunciate a basic plan for climate change,
outlining principles such as cap and trade, targets, and timetables.
Specific objectives could be outlined for industries such as
transportation, electric utilities, and HVACR. With such an outline,
Congress could then begin work on specific portions of the agenda
without having to write a comprehensive bill that addresses all
aspects.
In addition to the Senate Energy and
Natural Resources Committee and the House Energy and Commerce Committee
that produced bills in 2008, McIntosh suggested that the financial
dimensions of the climate change issue would draw the House Ways and
Means Committee and the Senate Finance Committee into the issue. Senior
staffs from the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of
Energy are also expected to recommend input to legislation. He urged
the HVACR industry to closely follow these committees and agencies.
By: joe maurer
Posted: February 2, 2009 8:13 PM
We all know the Industry could produce Green replacements for all the HFC's as soon as five years(probably sooner) with the right encouragement.