REGION: Efficiency seen as way to brighter future

Refrigerator improvements pointed to as example of where savings can be made

By DAVE DOWNEY - Staff Writer | Sunday, July 13, 2008 7:05 PM PDT

The refrigerator industry has made tremendous strides in recent years in reducing energy use. (Photo by Waldo Nilo - Staff Photographer)

While utilities constantly are searching for new sources of energy and stringing wires, there is an octogenarian scientist in Sacramento who has been laser focused for nearly a generation on another strategy for ensuring enough electricity to light homes: using power efficiently.

Art Rosenfeld, the 82-year-old physicist and California energy commissioner who has been called the "father of energy efficiency," has been spending the better part of 3 1/2 decades figuring out ways to stretch existing power supplies.

And Rosenfeld said there is a potential to save much more.

He estimated that over the next decade or so, energy experts will figure out how to reduce electric use in the typical home by up to 50 percent.

Rosenfeld isn't talking about ditching any glitzy, newfangled electronic gadgets. He's talking about saving energy by simply doing things better ---- more efficiently.

"I think the trend will be toward making much more energy-efficient houses," he said in a telephone interview last week.

Energy efficiency comes up in the debate over San Diego Gas & Electric Co.'s proposed $1.5 billion Sunrise Powerlink high-voltage transmission line.

That project's 500-kilovolt and 230-kilovolt wires would run from El Centro to Carmel Valley through Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, Santa Ysabel, Ramona and Rancho Penasquitos.

Conservationists and community activists who oppose it say there are ways to curb the ever-rising demand for power and eliminate the need for a power line. Utility officials counter that efficiency programs can help offset growing electricity use to a degree, but not enough to negate the need for the line.

Michael Shames, executive director for the advocacy group Utility Consumers' Action Network in San Diego, which opposes Sunrise, disagrees.

"Efficiency is critical, largely because it is the quickest and least expensive means of providing for our energy needs," he said last week. "If we are able to squeeze the waste out of our electrical system, then we don't need to add new, costly generation resources."

While utility officials contend major new sources of electricity are required, they say efficiency figures prominently in their long-term regional energy strategy.

"Energy efficiency is the least expensive and most environmentally friendly resource available and is a very high priority for us," said Rachel Laing, a spokeswoman for SDG&E.

While state regulators sort over the debate and the California Public Utilities Commission prepares to issue a decision on the project's fate by the end of this year, one thing is clear: Past efficiency initiatives have greatly reduced the need for more power.

The best such example in the home is the refrigerator.

Older models, with their hot motors and thin doors that never stayed shut, used to be massive energy hogs.

But following a generation of improvements in design, Rosenfeld said, the icebox now uses about one-fourth as much power as it did during the 1973 oil embargo.

And that's despite the fact newer models are bigger than the old ones.

The size of electricity savings is comparable to some of the nation's largest sources of energy.

Rosenfeld said that through refrigerator design standards, the country now saves, every year, the equivalent of the output of 80 power plants that generate 500 megawatts each. That's the size of SDG&E's Palomar Energy Center in Escondido.

Put another way, Rosenfeld said, the value of the electricity saved is twice the value of the power produced by the nation's hydroelectric projects.

"Refrigerator improvements are twice as important as all the dams in the United States put together," he said.

Rosenfeld said significant energy savings also have been realized by making household appliances more efficient, by better insulating homes and by improving cooling and heating systems.

While refrigerators use one-quarter of the power that they did in the early 1970s, central air conditioning units use half, he said.

More recently, he said, Californians have been saving energy by replacing the incandescent bulbs in their light fixtures with compact fluorescent bulbs.

"The state is pretty much being saturated with compact fluorescent lamps," he said, although some don't like their tendency to brighten slowly.

"People will complain, but we are fighting a huge global warming risk and we are going to have to make some adjustments," Rosenfeld said.

Rosenfeld started making adjustments back in 1973, when the OPEC oil embargo was in full swing and long lines of cars were building at gas stations.

It dawned on him that by turning off the lights in his office at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratories over the weekend, he could save 4 gallons of gas.

He also is credited for starting a California campaign to use energy more efficiently, by demanding tougher standards for the way builders construct homes and the way manufacturers make appliances.

And, 35 years later, the state's consumers, despite all the new gadgets and big-screen televisions, are using about the same amount of electricity per person ---- about 7,000 kilowatt-hours a year.

During the same period, per capita use nationwide has risen from 8,000 kilowatt-hours a year to about 12,000 kilowatt-hours.

Rosenfeld estimated that the savings from doing things more efficiently amounts to about 15 percent of the total electricity Californians use in a year.

"I think what Art Rosenfeld has done is absolutely outstanding," said Bill Powers, a San Diego engineer and activist who opposes the Sunrise line. "California was right to focus on energy efficiency."

Contact staff writer Dave Downey at (760) 745-6611, Ext. 2623, or ddowney@nctimes.com.

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6 comment(s)[-]Go to Top

Burt wrote on Jul 14, 2008 5:29 AM:Art is right on target--reduce the growing demand not by "living in grass huts", but by replacing inefficient electrical equipment with here-today technology such as Compact Florescent, LEDs, and Energy Star appliances. I run my 21 cf Kenmore refrigerator and ice maker continuously using only Solar PV, and take hot showers using water heated only by today's incident solar energy collected using a simple set of valves, black poly-line irrigation tubing and about 100 sqft of ground. There are many ways to maintain or improve your standard of living while actually using less electricity. That just makes good sense.

Cantinflas wrote on Jul 14, 2008 7:23 AM:We're going to still need those Sunrise lines for electricity to charge my car that will only go 75 miles before needing a recharge.

Billy Satire wrote on Jul 14, 2008 10:17 AM:OK, whats the big deal about finding alternative sources of energy? Let us force the people to buy the things SDG&E wants us to buy and use.
One way is to cut the prices on the things that are electricity hogs. Remember the old saying about the camp fire: "white man build big fire and sit way back. Indian build little fire and sit up close." Well, there you have it for TV; buy much smaller TV sets and sit up close to watch them.
Instead of building an 80 mile an hour HOV, for those coming to work in San Diego from the North on I-15, and so they can get to work faster and safer down here; force them to drive in relays, in their new electric cars that will not make it all the way. A Man lives it Corona drives his little hybrid to Escondido, parks it at a fellow employees house, plugs it in at that persons house to recharge, and they car pool it to San Diego. Did I say 80 miles an hour, change that to 40 miles an hour.
Another thing - why do we need four bed room houses? The people that have four or more bed rooms could be forced to close off two or even three of them and heat and cool only the bed rooms that are actually needed. And what is this den, tv room, and computer room stuff? We could force people to cut some of that silly stuff that they do not really need, regardless of how much want them. If they want to be cool and warm close the rooms off. We could put two or three families to a house. Haven't we learned anything from the illegals? Haven't we learned anything from Europe and the third world countries?
There now, we have a start, a small beginning, but a start. Let us make it a good start. SDG&E should take the lead, and their employees should set an example, with Laing and gang leading the way. Six months from now I want to see an article here in this newspaper, and an hour TV show, telling and showing the public how Laing and gang have cut back in their daily living and with them demonstrating how to save.
With those improvements we will not have to develop new sources of energy, such as solar where if we were getting 100 percent of the energy we need from the sun we would be using less than one percent of what is available.
If this is funny, why ain't I laughing?

How Come wrote on Jul 14, 2008 10:35 AM:no one talks about the environmental hazards associated with the batteries that solar needs to charge. How about the batteries in Hybrids or electric cars? Making and disposing of batteries is dangerous and highly toxic. Acids, lead etc. Where do you think this is going to go or come from. Also, going to need the electric plants to charge all of these. Solar won't get it for a long time.

John E wrote on Jul 14, 2008 11:28 AM:The solution to our energy problem is obvious -- we need to reduce demand while enhancing supply. Also, do not forget that saving water saves the energy consumed in treating it and to transporting it. Likewise, recycling many (admittedly not all) materials, most notably aluminum, is energy-efficient.

Vista Resident wrote on Jul 14, 2008 12:10 PM:Thanks for this article. Efficiency helps to solve the demand side of the energy problem. Zero population growth also helps on the demand side.

Our government is planning for doubling the population in San Diego county within this century. Meanwhile, American citizens have achieved zero population growth. But, our government allows in huge numbers of immigrants which makes our population keep growing.

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