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Consumer electrics switch to energy-efficiency mode

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Published 14 April 2005, updated 10 June 2013

Energy savings for household electric products are on their way after Parliament gave its go-ahead to a compromise agreement with the Council on the eco-design directive. Self-regulatory measures by industry will be given priority.

Energy-savings from consumer electrical appliances such as hairdryers and personal computers are on their way after Parliament gave its backing to the eco-design framework directive on 13 April. 

The deal came after a last-minute agreement was struck with the Council and Commission and approved by EU ambassadors late last week. MEPs, who were initially calling for tougher measures, backed down at the prospect of an uncertain conciliation procedure with the 25 member states in the Council. 

An important aspect of the compromise is that self-imposed measures by industry are to be given priority when they are deemed to be more efficient. This will be assessed by the Commission at an early stage after it has consulted a special stakeholders' forum bringing together representatives of industry, member states and NGOs. 

The actual measures are then decided by the Commission under the supervision of designated EU member state experts as part of the so-called comitology procedure. 

But the Commission is well known to lacking the staff resources needed to do the job. Green MEP Claude Turmes has pointed out that the Commission currently only has two people to draft implementing decisions on eco-design.

Measures for specific priority products will be decided in the next two years starting with heating, electric motors, lighting and domestic appliances. They will define energy-performance for each product and the related labelling to enable consumers to make informed choices. They will also carry information to encourage consumer responsibility in contributing to energy savings.

On one of the most controversial points in the negotiation, it was finally agreed to uphold the internal market (art. 95 of the EC Treaty) as the sole legal basis of the directive. In practice, this means member states will not be allowed to impose stricter environmental rules to make sure products are harmonised and more easily traded across all EU countries.

Positions: 

The Greens/EFA group in Parliament hailed the deal as a victory for Parliament. "Almost all of the directive's relevant provisions (…) were imposed by the Parliament," said Claude Turmes MEP.

Parliament Rapporteur Frédérique Ries (ALDE, Belgium) commented: "We have two aims: use technological innovation to fight the greenhouse effect and at the same time make SMEs and consumers aware of this ecological approach. Mission accomplished."

A Parliament source told EurActiv that the compromise reflects the lowest common denominator between Parliament and the 25 member states in Council. This will hold true for future political deals, the source added in a more general comment.

WWF's European Policy Office criticised the agreement for lacking ambition. According to head of climate and energy unit Dr Stephan Singer, the "biggest loophole of the new law" is that it allows self-regulation by industry as an alternative to the so-called implementing measures which are to be adopted under the directive on a case by case basis. Singer describes the voluntary agreements and the lack of independent verification on their implementation as "an invitation to cheat". On the positive side, WWF said it appreciated the Commission's will to implement measures to reduce energy waste from stand-by losses "which waste the most power". 

European household equipment manufacturers have welcomed the agreement's specifications concerning voluntary initiatives. CECED said industry self-commitments have delivered impressive results and helped maintain European manufacturers as world leaders in the field.  But CECD warned against any discrepancies in implementation and called on the Commission and the member states to ensure that the rules are properly enforced.

Next steps: 
  • The compromise is now set to be formally rubber-stamped by the Council at a forthcoming session
  • Specific measures are to be taken in the next two years for priority products
Background: 

The Parliament's Environment Committee on 15 March overwhelmingly supported the report by Frédérique Ries (Belgium, ALDE) for a second reading in plenary on the proposed eco-design framework directive (see EurActiv, 16 March 2005). The committee reintroduced the Parliament's April 2004 first reading amendments which were scrapped by the EU Council of Ministers in its common position of 30 November 2004. 

Covered by the framework directive are all products consuming energy apart from motor vehicles. According to Parliament, these would account for 40% of the CO2 emissions responsible for global warming, which are to be cut down under the Kyoto Protocol.

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