Energy Conservation Program for Commercial and Industrial Equipment: Energy Conservation Standards for Commercial Ice-Cream Freezers; Self-Contained Commercial Refrigerators, Commercial Freezers, and Commercial Refrigerator-Freezers Without Doors; and Remote Condensing Commercial Refrigerators, Commercial Freezers, and Commercial Refrigerator-Freezers, 1092-1142 [E8-31449]
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
10 CFR Part 431
[Docket Number EERE–2006–BT–STD–
0126]
RIN 1904–AB59
Energy Conservation Program for
Commercial and Industrial Equipment:
Energy Conservation Standards for
Commercial Ice-Cream Freezers; SelfContained Commercial Refrigerators,
Commercial Freezers, and Commercial
Refrigerator-Freezers Without Doors;
and Remote Condensing Commercial
Refrigerators, Commercial Freezers,
and Commercial Refrigerator-Freezers
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES2
AGENCY: Department of Energy, Office of
Energy Efficiency and Renewable
Energy.
ACTION: Final rule.
SUMMARY: The Department of Energy
(DOE) is adopting new energy
conservation standards for commercial
ice-cream freezers; self-contained
commercial refrigerators, commercial
freezers, and commercial refrigeratorfreezers without doors; and remote
condensing commercial refrigerators,
commercial freezers, and commercial
refrigerator-freezers. DOE has
determined that energy conservation
standards for these types of equipment
would result in significant conservation
of energy, and are technologically
feasible and economically justified.
DATES: The effective date of this rule is
March 10, 2009. The standards
established in today’s final rule will be
applicable starting January 1, 2012.
Incorporation by reference of the
material listed is approved by the
Director of the Federal Register on
March 10, 2009.
ADDRESSES: For access to the docket to
read background documents, the
technical support document, transcripts
of the public meetings in this
proceeding, or comments received, visit
the U.S. Department of Energy, Resource
Room of the Building Technologies
Program, 950 L’Enfant Plaza, SW., 6th
Floor, Washington, DC 20024, (202)
586–2945, between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, except Federal
holidays. Please call Brenda Edwards at
the above telephone number for
additional information regarding
visiting the Resource Room. (Note:
DOE’s Freedom of Information Reading
Room no longer houses rulemaking
materials.) You may also obtain copies
of certain previous rulemaking
documents in this proceeding (i.e.,
framework document, advance notice of
proposed rulemaking, notice of
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proposed rulemaking), draft analyses,
public meeting materials, and related
test procedure documents from the
Office of Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy’s Web site at https://
www.eere.energy.gov/buildings/
appliance_standards/commercial/
refrigeration_equipment.html.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Charles Llenza, U.S. Department of
Energy, Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy, Building
Technologies Program, EE–2J, 1000
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585–0121, (202) 586–
2192, Charles.Llenza@ee.doe.gov.
Francine Pinto, Esq., U.S. Department
of Energy, Office of General Counsel,
GC–72, 1000 Independence Avenue,
SW., Washington, DC 20585–0121, (202)
586–9507, Francine.Pinto@hq.doe.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Summary of the Final Rule and Its Benefits
A. The Standard Levels
B. Benefits to Customers of Commercial
Refrigeration Equipment
C. Impact on Manufacturers
D. National Benefits
II. Introduction
A. Authority
B. Background
1. History of Standards Rulemaking for
Commercial Refrigeration Equipment
III. General Discussion
A. Test Procedures
B. Technological Feasibility
1. General
2. Maximum Technologically Feasible
Levels
C. Energy Savings
D. Economic Justification
1. Specific Criteria
a. Economic Impact on Commercial
Customers and Manufacturers
b. Life-Cycle Costs
c. Energy Savings
d. Lessening of Utility or Performance of
Equipment
e. Impact of Any Lessening of Competition
f. Need of the Nation To Conserve Energy
g. Other Factors
2. Rebuttable Presumption
IV. Methodology and Discussion of
Comments on Methodology
A. Market and Technology Assessment
1. Definitions Related to Commercial
Refrigeration Equipment
a. Air-Curtain Angle Definition
b. Door Angle Definition
c. Ice-Cream Freezer Definition
d. Equipment Configuration Definitions
e. Hybrid and Wedge Case Definitions
2. Equipment Classes
B. Engineering Analysis
1. Approach
2. Analytical Models
a. Cost Model
b. Energy Consumption Model
3. Equipment Classes Analyzed
4. Wedge Cases
5. Ice-Cream Freezers—Temperature Range
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6. Special Application Temperature Cases
7. Coverage of Remote Condensing Units
8. Regulating Secondary Cooling
Applications
C. Markups to Determine Equipment Price
D. Energy Use Characterization
E. Life-Cycle Cost and Payback Period
Analyses
F. Shipments Analysis
G. National Impact Analysis
H. Life-Cycle Cost Sub-Group Analysis
I. Manufacturer Impact Analysis
J. Utility Impact Analysis
K. Employment Impact Analysis
L. Environmental Assessment
V. Discussion of Other Comments
A. Information and Assumptions Used in
Analyses
1. Market and Technology Assessment
a. Data Sources
b. Beverage Merchandisers
2. Engineering Analysis
a. Design Options
b. Baseline Models
c. Consideration of Alternative Refrigerants
d. Consideration of NSF 7 Type II
Equipment
e. Product Class Extension Factors
f. TSL Energy Limits
g. Compressor Selection Oversize Factor
h. Offset Factors for Self-Contained
Equipment
i. Self-Contained Condensing Coils
3. Manufacturer Impact Analysis
VI. Analytical Results and Conclusions
A. Trial Standard Levels
1. Miscellaneous Equipment
B. Significance of Energy Savings
C. Economic Justification
1. Economic Impact on Commercial
Customers
a. Life-Cycle Costs and Payback Period
b. Commercial Customer Sub-Group
Analysis
2. Economic Impact on Manufacturers
a. Industry Cash-Flow Analysis Results
b. Cumulative Regulatory Burden
c. Impacts on Employment
d. Impacts on Manufacturing Capacity
e. Impacts on Manufacturers That Are
Small Businesses
3. National Net Present Value and Net
National Employment
4. Impact on Utility or Performance of
Equipment
5. Impact of Any Lessening of Competition
6. Need of the Nation To Conserve Energy
7. Other Factors
D. Conclusion
VII. Procedural Issues and Regulatory Review
A. Review Under Executive Order 12866
B. Review Under the Regulatory Flexibility
Act
C. Review Under the Paperwork Reduction
Act
D. Review Under the National
Environmental Policy Act
E. Review Under Executive Order 13132
F. Review Under Executive Order 12988
G. Review Under the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995
H. Review Under the Treasury and General
Government Appropriations Act, 1999
I. Review Under Executive Order 12630
J. Review Under the Treasury and General
Government Appropriations Act, 2001
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K. Review Under Executive Order 13211
L. Review Under the Information Quality
Bulletin for Peer Review
M. Congressional Notification
VIII. Approval of the Office of the Secretary
I. Summary of the Final Rule and Its
Benefits
A. The Standard Levels
The Energy Policy and Conservation
Act, as amended (42 U.S.C. 6291 et seq.;
EPCA), directs the Department of Energy
(DOE) to establish mandatory energy
conservation standards for commercial
ice-cream freezers; self-contained
commercial refrigerators, commercial
freezers, and commercial refrigeratorfreezers without doors; and remote
condensing commercial refrigerators,
commercial freezers, and commercial
refrigerator-freezers. (42 U.S.C.
6313(c)(4)(A)) These types of equipment
are referred to collectively hereafter as
‘‘commercial refrigeration equipment.’’
Any such standard must be designed to
‘‘achieve the maximum improvement in
energy efficiency * * * which the
Secretary determines is technologically
feasible and economically justified.’’ (42
U.S.C. 6295(o)(2)(A) and 6316(e)(1))
Furthermore, the new standard must
‘‘result in significant conservation of
energy.’’ (42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(3)(B) and
6316(e)(1)) The standards in today’s
final rule, which apply to all
commercial refrigeration equipment,
satisfy these requirements.1
Table I–1 shows the standard levels
DOE is adopting today. These standards
will apply to all commercial
refrigeration equipment manufactured
for sale in the United States, or
imported to the United States, on or
after January 1, 2012.
TABLE I–1—STANDARD LEVELS FOR COMMERCIAL REFRIGERATION EQUIPMENT
Standard level * **
(kWh/day) ***
Equipment class 2
VOP.RC.M ...............................................
SVO.RC.M ...............................................
HZO.RC.M ...............................................
VOP.RC.L ................................................
HZO.RC.L ................................................
VCT.RC.M ...............................................
VCT.RC.L ................................................
SOC.RC.M ...............................................
VOP.SC.M ...............................................
SVO.SC.M ...............................................
HZO.SC.M ...............................................
HZO.SC.L ................................................
VCT.SC.I ..................................................
VCS.SC.I .................................................
HCT.SC.I .................................................
SVO.RC.L ................................................
VOP.RC.I .................................................
SVO.RC.I .................................................
HZO.RC.I .................................................
0.82
0.83
0.35
2.27
0.57
0.22
0.56
0.51
1.74
1.73
0.77
1.92
0.67
0.38
0.56
2.27
2.89
2.89
0.72
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
TDA + 4.07
TDA + 3.18
TDA + 2.88
TDA + 6.85
TDA + 6.88
TDA + 1.95
TDA + 2.61
TDA + 0.11
TDA + 4.71
TDA + 4.59
TDA + 5.55
TDA + 7.08
TDA + 3.29
V + 0.88
TDA + 0.43
TDA + 6.85
TDA + 8.7
TDA + 8.7
TDA + 8.74
Standard level * **
(kWh/day)
Equipment class
VCT.RC.I .................................................
HCT.RC.M ...............................................
HCT.RC.L ................................................
HCT.RC.I .................................................
VCS.RC.M ...............................................
VCS.RC.L ................................................
VCS.RC.I .................................................
HCS.RC.M ..............................................
HCS.RC.L ...............................................
HCS.RC.I ................................................
SOC.RC.L ...............................................
SOC.RC.I ................................................
VOP.SC.L ................................................
VOP.SC.I .................................................
SVO.SC.L ................................................
SVO.SC.I .................................................
HZO.SC.I .................................................
SOC.SC.I ................................................
HCS.SC.I .................................................
0.66 × TDA + 3.05
0.16 × TDA + 0.13
0.34 × TDA + 0.26
0.4 × TDA + 0.31
0.11 × V + 0.26
0.23 × V + 0.54
0.27 × V + 0.63
0.11 × V + 0.26
0.23 × V + 0.54
0.27 × V + 0.63
1.08 × TDA + 0.22
1.26 × TDA + 0.26
4.37 × TDA + 11.82
5.55 × TDA + 15.02
4.34 × TDA + 11.51
5.52 × TDA + 14.63
2.44 × TDA + 9.
1.76 × TDA + 0.36
0.38 × V + 0.88
* TDA is the total display area of the case, as measured in the Air-Conditioning and Refrigeration Institute (ARI) Standard 1200–2006, Appendix D.
** V is the volume of the case, as measured in ARI Standard 1200–2006, Appendix C.
*** Kilowatt hours per day.
2 For this rulemaking, equipment class designations consist of a combination (in sequential order separated by periods) of: (1) An equipment
family code (VOP=vertical open, SVO=semivertical open, HZO=horizontal open, VCT=vertical transparent doors, VCS=vertical solid doors,
HCT=horizontal transparent doors, HCS=horizontal solid doors, or SOC=service over counter); (2) an operating mode code (RC=remote condensing or SC=self contained); and (3) a rating temperature code (M=medium temperature (38 °F), L=low temperature (0 °F), or I=ice-cream
temperature (¥15 °F)). For example, ‘‘VOP.RC.M’’ refers to the ‘‘vertical open, remote condensing, medium temperature’’ equipment class. See
discussion in section V.A.2 and chapter 3 of the TSD, market and technology assessment, for a more detailed explanation of the equipment
class terminology. See Table IV–2 for a list of the equipment classes by category.
B. Benefits to Customers of Commercial
Refrigeration Equipment
Table I–2 indicates the impacts on
commercial customers of today’s
standards.
TABLE I–2—IMPLICATIONS OF NEW STANDARDS FOR COMMERCIAL CONSUMERS
Total
installed
cost
($)
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Equipment class
Energy conservation standard
VOP.RC.M .................................
VOP.RC.L ..................................
VOP.SC.M .................................
0.82 × TDA + 4.07 ...................................................
2.27 × TDA + 6.85 ...................................................
1.74 × TDA + 4.71 ...................................................
8,065
11,222
4,381
Total
installed
cost
increase
($)
536
1,947
633
1 Currently, no mandatory Federal energy
conservation standards exist for the commercial
refrigeration equipment covered by this rulemaking.
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Life-cycle
cost savings
($)
1,788
3,938
1,549
Payback
period
(years)
2.0
2.8
2.4
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TABLE I–2—IMPLICATIONS OF NEW STANDARDS FOR COMMERCIAL CONSUMERS—Continued
Equipment class
VCT.RC.M .................................
VCT.RC.L ..................................
VCT.SC.I ...................................
VCS.SC.I ...................................
SVO.RC.M .................................
SVO.SC.M .................................
SOC.RC.M ................................
HZO.RC.M .................................
HZO.RC.L ..................................
HZO.SC.M .................................
HZO.SC.L ..................................
HCT.SC.I ...................................
Energy conservation standard
0.22
0.56
0.67
0.38
0.83
1.73
0.51
0.35
0.57
0.77
1.92
0.56
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
TDA + 1.95 ...................................................
TDA + 2.61 ...................................................
TDA + 3.29 ...................................................
V + 0.88 ........................................................
TDA + 3.18 ...................................................
TDA + 4.59 ...................................................
TDA + 0.11 ...................................................
TDA + 2.88 ...................................................
TDA + 6.88 ...................................................
TDA + 5.55 ...................................................
TDA + 7.08 ...................................................
TDA + 0.43 ...................................................
The economic impacts on commercial
consumers (i.e., the average life-cycle
cost (LCC) savings) are positive for all
equipment classes. For example,
currently available remote condensing
vertical open equipment operating at
medium temperatures, semivertical
equipment with those same
characteristics, and vertical closed
equipment with transparent doors and
operating at low temperatures—three of
the most common types of commercial
refrigeration equipment—typically have
installed prices of $8,065, $7,470 and
$12,584, and annual energy costs of
$1,879, $1,413, and $2,249, respectively.
To meet the new standards, DOE
estimates that the installed prices of
such equipment will be $8,601, $7,905,
and $15,097, respectively, an increase of
$536, $435, and $2,513. This price
increase will be offset by annual energy
savings of about $331, $234, and $977.
C. Impact on Manufacturers
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Using a real corporate discount rate of
11.5 percent, DOE estimates the
industry net present value (INPV) of the
commercial refrigeration equipment
industry to be $540 million in 2007$.
DOE expects the impact of today’s
standards on the industry net present
value (INPV) of manufacturers of
commercial refrigeration equipment to
be a loss of 7.29 to 27.35 percent (¥$39
million to ¥$148 million). Based on
DOE’s interviews with manufacturers of
commercial refrigeration equipment,
DOE expects minimal plant closings or
loss of employment as a result of the
standards.
D. National Benefits
DOE estimates the standards will save
approximately 1.035 quads (quadrillion
(1015) British thermal units (Btu)) of
energy over 30 years (2012–2042). This
is equivalent to all the energy consumed
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Total
installed
cost
($)
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11,654
12,584
6,602
4,227
7,470
3,719
12,740
8,133
8,194
3,398
3,836
2,478
by more than 5 million American
households in a single year.
By 2042, DOE expects the energy
savings from the standards to eliminate
the need for approximately 0.7 new
1,000-megawatt (MW) power plants.
These energy savings will result in
cumulative greenhouse gas emission
reductions of approximately 52.6
million tons (Mt) of carbon dioxide
(CO2), or an amount equal to that
produced by approximately 332,500
cars every year. Additionally, the
standards will help alleviate air
pollution by resulting in between
approximately 3.64 and 89.97 kilotons
(kt) of cumulative nitrogen oxide (NOX)
emission reductions and between
approximately 0 and 1.38 tons of
cumulative mercury emission
reductions from 2012 through 2042. The
estimated net present values of these
emissions reductions are between $0
and $469 million for CO2, between
$394,000 and $9.7 million for NOX, and
between $0 and $284,000 for mercury at
a 7-percent discount rate in 2007$,
discounted to 2008. At a 3-percent
discount rate, the estimated net present
values of these emissions reductions are
between $0 and $955 million for CO2,
between $0.8 million and $20.5 million
for NOX, and between $0 and $560,000
for mercury.
The national NPV of the standards is
$1.414 billion using a 7-percent
discount rate and $3.930 billion using a
3-percent discount rate, cumulative
from 2012 to 2062 in 2007$. This is the
estimated total value of future savings
minus the estimated increased
equipment costs, discounted to 2008.
The benefits and costs of today’s final
rule can also be expressed in terms of
annualized [2007$] values between 2012
and 2042. Using a 7-percent discount
rate for the annualized cost analysis, the
cost of the standards established in
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Total
installed
cost
increase
($)
2,134
2,513
1,385
326
435
439
240
248
270
313
460
238
Life-cycle
cost savings
($)
2,339
5,419
5,217
1,757
1,274
1,136
945
1,040
1,102
826
1,761
785
Payback
period
(years)
3.9
2.6
1.7
1.3
1.9
2.3
1.7
1.6
1.6
2.3
1.7
1.9
today’s final rule is $95 million per year
in increased equipment and installation
costs, while the annualized benefits are
$229 million per year in reduced
equipment operating costs. Using a 3percent discount rate, the cost of the
standards established in today’s final
rule is $81 million per year, while the
benefits of today’s standards are $253
million per year.
II. Introduction
A. Authority
Title III of EPCA sets forth a variety
of provisions designed to improve
energy efficiency. Part A of Title III (42
U.S.C. 6291–6309) provides for the
Energy Conservation Program for
Consumer Products Other than
Automobiles. Part A–1 of Title III (42
U.S.C. 6311–6317) establishes a similar
program for ‘‘Certain Industrial
Equipment,’’ including commercial
refrigeration equipment, the subject of
this rulemaking.3 DOE publishes today’s
final rule pursuant to Part A–1 of Title
III, which provides for test procedures,
labeling, and energy conservation
standards for commercial refrigeration
equipment and certain other equipment;
and authorizes DOE to require
information and reports from
manufacturers. The test procedure for
commercial refrigeration equipment
appears in Title 10 Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR) part 431.64.
EPCA provides criteria for prescribing
new or amended standards for
commercial refrigeration equipment. As
indicated above, any new or amended
standard for this equipment must be
designed to achieve the maximum
improvement in energy efficiency that is
technologically feasible and
3 This part was originally titled Part C. However,
it was redesignated Part A–1 after Part B of Title
III of EPCA was repealed by Public Law 109–58.
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economically justified. (42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(2)(A) and 6316(e)(1))
Additionally, EPCA provides specific
prohibitions on prescribing such
standards. DOE may not prescribe an
amended or new standard for any
equipment for which DOE has not
established a test procedure. (42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(3)(A) and 6316(e)(1)) Further,
DOE may not prescribe an amended or
new standard if DOE determines by rule
that such standard would not result in
‘‘significant conservation of energy’’ or
‘‘is not technologically feasible or
economically justified.’’ (42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(3)(B) and 6316(e)(1))
EPCA also provides that in deciding
whether such a standard is
economically justified for equipment
such as commercial refrigeration
equipment, DOE must, after receiving
comments on the proposed standard,
determine whether the benefits of the
standard exceed its burdens by
considering, to the greatest extent
practicable, the following seven factors:
1. The economic impact of the
standard on manufacturers and
consumers of the products subject to the
standard;
2. The savings in operating costs
throughout the estimated average life of
products in the type (or class) compared
to any increase in the price, initial
charges, or maintenance expenses for
the covered products that are likely to
result from the imposition of the
standard;
3. The total projected amount of
energy savings likely to result directly
from the imposition of the standard;
4. Any lessening of the utility or the
performance of the products likely to
result from the imposition of the
standard;
5. The impact of any lessening of
competition, as determined in writing
by the Attorney General, that is likely to
result from the imposition of the
standard;
6. The need for national energy
conservation; and
7. Other factors the Secretary of
Energy (Secretary) considers relevant.
(42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(2)(B)(i)–(ii) and
6316(e)(1))
In addition, EPCA, as amended (42
U.S.C. 6295(o)(2)(B)(iii) and 6316(e)(1)),
establishes a rebuttable presumption
that a standard for commercial
refrigeration equipment is economically
justified if the Secretary finds that ‘‘the
additional cost to the consumer of
purchasing a product complying with
an energy conservation standard level
will be less than three times the value
of the energy (and as applicable, water)
savings during the first year that the
consumer will receive as a result of the
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standard,’’ as calculated under the test
procedure in place for that standard.
EPCA further provides that the
Secretary may not prescribe an amended
or new standard if interested persons
have established by a preponderance of
the evidence that the standard is ‘‘likely
to result in the unavailability in the
United States in any covered product
type (or class) of performance
characteristics (including reliability),
features, sizes, capacities, and volumes
that are substantially the same as those
generally available in the United States
at the time of the Secretary’s finding.’’
(42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(4) and 6316(e)(1))
Section 325(q)(1) of EPCA is
applicable to promulgating standards for
most types or classes of equipment,
including commercial refrigeration
equipment, that have two or more
subcategories. (42 U.S.C. 6295(q)(1) and
42 U.S.C. 6316(e)(1)) Under this
provision, DOE must specify a different
standard level than that which applies
generally to such type or class of
equipment for any group of products
‘‘which have the same function or
intended use, if * * * products within
such group—(A) consume a different
kind of energy from that consumed by
other covered products within such type
(or class); or (B) have a capacity or other
performance-related feature which other
products within such type (or class) do
not have and such feature justifies a
higher or lower standard’’ than applies
or will apply to the other products. (42
U.S.C. 6295(q)(1)(A) and (B)) In
determining whether a performancerelated feature justifies such a different
standard for a group of products, DOE
must consider ‘‘such factors as the
utility to the consumer of such a
feature’’ and other factors DOE deems
appropriate. (42 U.S.C. 6295(q)(1)) Any
rule prescribing such a standard must
include an explanation of the basis on
which DOE established such a higher or
lower level. (See 42 U.S.C. 6295(q)(2))
Federal energy conservation standards
for commercial equipment generally
supersede State laws or regulations
concerning energy conservation testing,
labeling, and standards. (42 U.S.C.
6297(a)–(c); 42 U.S.C. 6316(e)(2)–(3))
DOE can, however, grant waivers of
preemption for particular State laws or
regulations, in accordance with the
procedures and other provisions of
section 327(d) of the Act. (42 U.S.C.
6297(d); 42 U.S.C. 6316(e)(2)–(3))
B. Background
1. History of Standards Rulemaking for
Commercial Refrigeration Equipment
As discussed in the notice of
proposed rulemaking, 73 FR 50072,
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1095
50076 (August 25, 2008) (the August
2008 NOPR), the EPACT 2005
amendments to EPCA require that DOE
issue energy conservation standards for
the equipment covered by this
rulemaking. (42 U.S.C. 6313(c)(4)(A))
The amendments also include
definitions for terms relevant to this
equipment (42 U.S.C. 6311(9)). These
definitions provide that commercial
refrigeration equipment is connected to
either a self-contained condensing unit
or to a remote condensing unit (42
U.S.C. 6311(9)(A)(vii)), the two
condenser configurations of equipment
covered by this rulemaking, and include
definitions of a remote condensing unit
and self-contained condensing unit (42
U.S.C. 6311(9)(E)–(F)).
DOE commenced this rulemaking on
April 25, 2006, by publishing a notice
of a public meeting and of the
availability of its framework document
for the rulemaking. 71 FR 23876. The
framework document described the
approaches DOE anticipated using and
issues to be resolved in the rulemaking.
DOE held a public meeting on May 16,
2006, to present the contents of the
framework document, describe the
analyses DOE planned to conduct
during the rulemaking, obtain public
comment on these subjects, and
facilitate the public’s involvement in the
rulemaking. DOE also allowed the
submission of written statements, after
the public meeting, in response to the
framework document.
On July 26, 2007, DOE published an
advance notice of proposed rulemaking
(ANOPR) in this proceeding. 72 FR
41161 (the July 2007 ANOPR). In the
July 2007 ANOPR, DOE sought
comment on its proposed equipment
classes for the rulemaking, and on the
analytical framework, models, and tools
that DOE used to analyze the impacts of
energy conservation standards for
commercial refrigeration equipment. In
conjunction with the July 2007 ANOPR,
DOE published on its Web site the
complete ANOPR TSD, which included
the results of DOE’s various preliminary
analyses in this rulemaking. In the July
2007 ANOPR, DOE requested oral and
written comments on these results and
on a range of other issues. DOE held a
public meeting in Washington, DC, on
August 23, 2007, to present the
methodology and results of the ANOPR
analyses and to receive oral comments
from those who attended. The oral and
written comments DOE received
focused on DOE’s assumptions,
approach, and equipment class
breakdown, and were addressed in
detail in the August 2008 NOPR.
In the August 2008 NOPR, DOE
proposed new energy conservation
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standards for commercial refrigeration
equipment. 73 FR 50072. In conjunction
with the August 2008 NOPR, DOE also
published on its Web site the complete
technical support document (TSD) for
the proposed rule, which incorporated
the final analyses DOE conducted and
technical documentation for each
analysis. The TSD included the
engineering analysis spreadsheets, the
LCC spreadsheet, and the national
impact analysis spreadsheet. The
standards DOE proposed for commercial
refrigeration equipment are shown in
Table II–1.
TABLE II–1—AUGUST 2008 PROPOSED STANDARD LEVELS FOR COMMERCIAL REFRIGERATION EQUIPMENT
Standard level* **
(kWh/day)
Equipment class
VOP.RC.M ...............................................
SVO.RC.M ...............................................
HZO.RC.M ...............................................
VOP.RC.L ................................................
HZO.RC.L ................................................
VCT.RC.M ...............................................
VCT.RC.L ................................................
SOC.RC.M ...............................................
VOP.SC.M ...............................................
SVO.SC.M ...............................................
HZO.SC.M ...............................................
HZO.SC.L ................................................
VCT.SC.I ..................................................
VCS.SC.I .................................................
HCT.SC.I .................................................
SVO.RC.L ................................................
VOP.RC.I .................................................
SVO.RC.I .................................................
HZO.RC.I .................................................
0.82 × TDA + 4.07
0.83 × TDA + 3.18
0.35 × TDA + 2.88
2.28 × TDA + 6.85
0.57 × TDA + 6.88
0.25 × TDA + 1.95
0.6 × TDA + 2.61
0.51 × TDA + 0.11
1.74 × TDA + 4.71
1.73 × TDA + 4.59
0.77 × TDA + 5.55
1.92 × TDA + 7.08
0.73 × TDA + 3.29
0.38 × V + 0.88
0.56 × TDA + 0.43
2.28 × TDA + 6.85
2.9 × TDA + 8.7
2.9 × TDA + 8.7
0.72 × TDA + 8.74
Standard level* **
(kWh/day)
Equipment class
VCT.RC.I .................................................
HCT.RC.M ...............................................
HCT.RC.L ................................................
HCT.RC.I .................................................
VCS.RC.M ...............................................
VCS.RC.L ................................................
VCS.RC.I .................................................
HCS.RC.M ..............................................
HCS.RC.L ...............................................
HCS.RC.I ................................................
SOC.RC.L ...............................................
SOC.RC.I ................................................
VOP.SC.L ................................................
VOP.SC.I .................................................
SVO.SC.L ................................................
SVO.SC.I .................................................
HZO.SC.I .................................................
SOC.SC.I ................................................
HCS.SC.I .................................................
0.71 × TDA + 3.05
0.16 × TDA + 0.13
0.34 × TDA + 0.26
0.4 × TDA + 0.31
0.11 × V + 0.26
0.23 × V + 0.54
0.27 × V + 0.63
0.11 × V + 0.26
0.23 × V + 0.54
0.27 × V + 0.63
1.08 × TDA + 0.22
1.26 × TDA + 0.26
4.37 × TDA + 11.82
5.55 × TDA + 15.02
4.34 × TDA + 11.51
5.52 × TDA + 14.63
2.44 × TDA + 9
1.76 × TDA + 0.36
0.38 × V + 0.88
* TDA is the total display area of the case, as measured in the ARI Standard 1200–2006, Appendix D.
** V is the volume of the case, as measured in ARI Standard 1200–2006, Appendix C.
In the August 2008 NOPR, DOE
identified seven issues on which is was
particularly interested in receiving
comments and views of interested
parties: Light-emitting diode (LED) price
projections, base case efficiency trends,
operating temperature ranges, offset
factors for smaller equipment, extension
of standards developed for the 15
primary classes to the remaining 23
secondary classes, standards for hybrid
cases and wedges, and standard levels.
73 FR 50134. After the publication of
the August 2008 NOPR, DOE received
written comments on these and other
issues. DOE also held a public meeting
in Washington, DC, on September 23,
2008, to hear oral comments on and
solicit information relevant to the
proposed rule. The August 2008 NOPR
included additional background
information on the history of this
rulemaking. 73 FR 50076–77.
III. General Discussion
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A. Test Procedures
On December 8, 2006, DOE published
a final rule (the December 2006 final
rule) in which it adopted American
National Standards Institute (ANSI)/AirConditioning and Refrigeration Institute
(ARI) Standard 1200–2006,
‘‘Performance Rating of Commercial
Refrigerated Display Merchandisers and
Storage Cabinets,’’ as the DOE test
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procedure for this equipment.4 71 FR
71340, 71369–70; 10 CFR 431.63–
431.64. ARI Standard 1200–2006
contains rating temperature
specifications of 38 °F (±2 °F) for
commercial refrigerators and refrigerator
compartments, 0 °F (±2 °F) for
commercial freezers and freezer
compartments, and ¥5 °F (±2 °F) for
commercial ice-cream freezers. The
standard also requires performance tests
to be conducted according to the ANSI/
American Society of Heating,
Refrigerating, and Air-Conditioning
Engineers (ASHRAE) Standard 72–2005,
‘‘Method of Testing Commercial
Refrigerators and Freezers.’’ In the test
procedure final rule, DOE also adopted
a ¥15 °F (±2 °F) rating temperature for
commercial ice-cream freezers. 71 FR
71370. In addition, DOE adopted ANSI/
Association of Home Appliance
Manufacturers (AHAM) Standard HRF–
1–2004, ‘‘Energy, Performance and
Capacity of Household Refrigerators,
Refrigerator-Freezers and Freezers,’’ for
determining compartment volumes for
this equipment. 71 FR 71369–70.
B. Technological Feasibility
4 The Air-Conditioning and Refrigeration Institute
(ARI) and the Gas Appliance Manufacturers
Association (GAMA) announced on December 17,
2007, that their members voted to approve the
merger of two trade associations to represent the
interests of cooling, heating, and commercial
refrigeration equipment manufacturers. The merged
association became AHRI on January 1, 2008.
2. Maximum Technologically Feasible
Levels
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1. General
As stated above, any standards that
DOE establishes for commercial
refrigeration equipment must be
technologically feasible. (42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(2)(A) and (o)(3)(B); 42 U.S.C.
6316(e)(1)) DOE considers a design
option to be technologically feasible if it
is in use by the respective industry or
if research has progressed to the
development of a working prototype.
‘‘Technologies incorporated in
commercial products or in working
prototypes will be considered
technologically feasible.’’ 10 CFR part
430, subpart C, appendix A, section
4(a)(4)(i).
This final rule considers the same
design options as those evaluated in the
August 2008 NOPR. (See chapter 4 of
the final rule TSD accompanying this
notice.) All the evaluated technologies
have been used (or are being used) in
commercially available products or
working prototypes. Therefore, DOE has
determined that all of the efficiency
levels evaluated in this notice are
technologically feasible.
As required by EPCA (42 U.S.C.
6295(p)(2) and 42 U.S.C. 6316(e)(1)) in
developing the August 2008 NOPR, DOE
identified the energy use levels that
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would achieve the maximum reductions
in energy use that are technologically
feasible (max-tech levels) for
commercial refrigeration equipment. 73
FR at 50077–78. (See NOPR TSD
chapter 5.) DOE received comments
indicating that LED efficacy had
improved since the August 2008 NOPR.
DOE also received comments regarding
the LED lighting configurations assumed
in the engineering analysis for various
equipment types. This caused the maxtech levels proposed in the August 2008
NOPR to change for equipment classes
with lighting. In general, the max-tech
levels for open equipment classes
1097
decreased and the max-tech levels for
closed cases increased from the maxtech levels proposed in the August 2008
NOPR. For today’s final rule, the maxtech levels for all classes are the levels
provided in Table III–1.
TABLE III–1—‘‘MAX-TECH’’ ENERGY USE LEVELS
‘‘Max-tech’’ level
(kWh/day)
Equipment class
VOP.RC.M ...............................................
SVO.RC.M ...............................................
HZO.RC.M ...............................................
VOP.RC.L ................................................
HZO.RC.L ................................................
VCT.RC.M ...............................................
VCT.RC.L ................................................
SOC.RC.M ...............................................
VOP.SC.M ...............................................
SVO.SC.M ...............................................
HZO.SC.M ...............................................
HZO.SC.L ................................................
VCT.SC.I ..................................................
VCS.SC.I .................................................
HCT.SC.I .................................................
SVO.RC.L ................................................
VOP.RC.I .................................................
SVO.RC.I .................................................
HZO.RC.I .................................................
0.74 × TDA + 4.07
0.76 × TDA + 3.18
0.35 × TDA + 2.88
2.27 × TDA + 6.85
0.57 × TDA + 6.88
0.22 × TDA + 1.95
0.56 × TDA + 2.61
0.4 × TDA + 0.11
1.65 × TDA + 4.71
1.65 × TDA + 4.59
0.77 × TDA + 5.55
1.92 × TDA + 7.08
0.67 × TDA + 3.29
0.38 × V + 0.88
0.56 × TDA + 0.43
2.27 × TDA + 6.85
2.89 × TDA + 8.7
2.89 × TDA + 8.7
0.72 × TDA + 8.74
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C. Energy Savings
DOE forecasted energy savings in its
national energy savings (NES) analysis,
through the use of an NES spreadsheet
tool, as discussed in the August 2008
NOPR. 73 FR at 50078, 50101–04,
50121.
One of the criteria that governs DOE’s
adoption of standards for commercial
refrigeration equipment is that the
standard must result in ‘‘significant
conservation of energy.’’ (42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(3)(B) and 42 U.S.C. 6316(e)(1))
While EPCA does not define the term
‘‘significant,’’ a U.S. Court of Appeals,
in Natural Resources Defense Council v.
Herrington, 768 F.2d 1355, 1373 (DC
Cir. 1985), indicated that Congress
intended ‘‘significant’’ energy savings in
this context to be savings that were not
‘‘genuinely trivial.’’ DOE’s estimates of
the energy savings for energy
conservation standards at each of the
trial standard levels (TSLs) in today’s
rule indicate that the energy savings
each would achieve are nontrivial.
Therefore, DOE considers these savings
‘‘significant’’ within the meaning of
section 325 of EPCA.
D. Economic Justification
1. Specific Criteria
As noted earlier, EPCA provides
seven factors to evaluate in determining
whether an energy conservation
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‘‘Max-tech’’ level
(kWh/day)
Equipment class
VCT.RC.I .................................................
HCT.RC.M ...............................................
HCT.RC.L ................................................
HCT.RC.I .................................................
VCS.RC.M ...............................................
VCS.RC.L ................................................
VCS.RC.I .................................................
HCS.RC.M ..............................................
HCS.RC.L ...............................................
HCS.RC.I ................................................
SOC.RC.L ...............................................
SOC.RC.I ................................................
VOP.SC.L ................................................
VOP.SC.I .................................................
SVO.SC.L ................................................
SVO.SC.I .................................................
HZO.SC.I .................................................
SOC.SC.I ................................................
HCS.SC.I .................................................
0.66 × TDA + 3.05
0.16 × TDA + 0.13
0.34 × TDA + 0.26
0.4 × TDA + 0.31
0.11 × V + 0.26
0.23 × V + 0.54
0.27 × V + 0.63
0.11 × V + 0.26
0.23 × V + 0.54
0.27 × V + 0.63
0.84 × TDA + 0.22
0.99 × TDA + 0.26
4.14 × TDA + 11.82
5.26 × TDA + 15.02
4.15 × TDA + 11.51
5.27 × TDA + 14.63
2.44 × TDA + 9.
1.38 × TDA + 0.36
0.38 × V + 0.88
standard for commercial refrigeration
equipment is economically justified. (42
U.S.C. 6295(o)(2)(B)(i) and 42 U.S.C.
6316(e)(1)) The following sections
discuss how DOE has addressed each of
those seven factors in this rulemaking.
the sum of the purchase price and the
operating expense—discounted over the
lifetime of the equipment—to estimate
the range in LCC benefits that
commercial consumers would expect to
achieve due to the standards.
a. Economic Impact on Commercial
Customers and Manufacturers
DOE considered the economic impact
of the new commercial refrigeration
equipment standards on commercial
customers and manufacturers. For
customers, DOE measured the economic
impact as the change in installed cost
and life-cycle operating costs, i.e., the
LCC. (See sections IV.E and VI.C.1.a,
and chapter 8 of the TSD accompanying
this notice.) DOE investigated the
impacts on manufacturers through the
manufacturer impact analysis (MIA).
(See sections IV.I and VI.C.2, and
chapter 13 of the TSD accompanying
this notice.) The economic impact on
commercial customers and
manufacturers is discussed in detail in
the August 2008 NOPR. 73 FR at 50078–
79, 50095–50100, 50104–07, 50013–16,
50117–21, 50130–31.
c. Energy Savings
Although significant conservation of
energy is a separate statutory
requirement for imposing an energy
conservation standard, EPCA also
requires DOE, in determining the
economic justification of a proposed
standard, to consider the total projected
energy savings that are expected to
result directly from the standard. (42
U.S.C. 6295(o)(2)(B)(i)(III) and 42 U.S.C.
6316(e)(1)) As in the August 2008
NOPR, 73 FR at 50078, 50101–04,
50121, for today’s final rule DOE used
the NES spreadsheet results in its
consideration of total projected savings
that are directly attributable to the
standard levels DOE considered.
b. Life-Cycle Costs
DOE considered life-cycle costs of
commercial refrigeration equipment, as
discussed in the August 2008 NOPR. 73
FR at 50078–79, 50095–50100, 50104,
50013–16, 50117–18. DOE calculated
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d. Lessening of Utility or Performance of
Equipment
In selecting today’s standard levels,
DOE sought to avoid new standards for
commercial refrigeration equipment that
would lessen the utility or performance
of that equipment. (42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(2)(B)(i)(IV) and 42 U.S.C.
6316(e)(1)) 73 FR at 50079, 50088–89,
50123.
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e. Impact of Any Lessening of
Competition
DOE considers any lessening of
competition that is likely to result from
standards. Accordingly, as discussed in
the August 2008 NOPR, 73 FR at 50079,
50123, DOE requested that the Attorney
General transmit to the Secretary a
written determination of the impact, if
any, of any lessening of competition
likely to result from the proposed
standards, together with an analysis of
the nature and extent of such impact.
(42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(2)(B)(i)(V) and (B)(ii)
and 42 U.S.C. 6316(e)(1))
To assist the Attorney General in
making such a determination, DOE
provided the Department of Justice
(DOJ) with copies of the August 2008
proposed rule and the TSD for review.
(DOJ, No. 37 at pp. 1–2) The Attorney
General’s response is discussed in
section VI.C.5 below, and is reprinted at
the end of this rule.5
f. Need of the Nation To Conserve
Energy
In considering standards for
commercial refrigeration equipment, the
Secretary must consider the need of the
Nation to conserve energy. (42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(2)(B)(i)(VI) and 42 U.S.C.
6316(e)(1)) The Secretary recognizes
that energy conservation benefits the
Nation in several important ways. The
non-monetary benefits of the standards
are likely to be reflected in
improvements to the security and
reliability of the Nation’s energy system.
Today’s standards also will likely result
in environmental benefits. As discussed
in the proposed rule, DOE has
considered these factors in adopting
today’s standards. 73 FR 50074, 50079,
50108, 50123–26, 50132.
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES2
g. Other Factors
EPCA directs the Secretary of Energy,
in determining whether a standard is
economically justified, to consider any
other factors that the Secretary deems to
be relevant. (42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(2)(B)(i)(VII) and 42 U.S.C.
6316(e)(1)) In adopting today’s standard,
DOE considered the LCC impacts on the
commercial refrigeration equipment of
independent, small grocery/
convenience store businesses.
Compared to the impact of standards on
the overall market for commercial
refrigeration equipment, the impact of
5 A notation in the form ‘‘DOJ, No. 37 at pp. 1–
2’’ identifies a written comment that DOE has
received and has included in the docket of this
rulemaking. This particular notation refers to (1) a
comment submitted by the Department of Justice
(DOJ), (2) in document number 37 in the docket of
this rulemaking, and (3) appearing on pages 1 and
2 of document number 37.
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standards on these businesses might be
disproportionate because these
businesses experience both higher
discount rates and lack of access to
national account equipment purchases.
73 FR 50079, 50104, 50117–18.
2. Rebuttable Presumption
Section 325(o)(2)(B)(iii) of EPCA
states that there is a rebuttable
presumption that an energy
conservation standard is economically
justified if the additional cost to the
consumer of a product that meets the
standard level is less than three times
the value of the first-year energy (and as
applicable water) savings resulting from
the standard, as calculated under the
applicable DOE test procedure. (42
U.S.C. 6295(o)(2)(B)(iii) and 42 U.S.C.
6316(e)(1)) DOE’s LCC and payback
period (PBP) analyses generate values
that calculate the payback period for
consumers of potential energy
conservation standards, which includes,
but is not limited to, the three-year
payback period contemplated under the
rebuttable presumption test discussed
above. However, DOE routinely
conducts a full economic analysis that
considers the full range of impacts,
including those to the consumer,
manufacturer, Nation, and environment,
as required under 42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(2)(B)(i) and 42 U.S.C.
6316(e)(1). The results of this analysis
serve as the basis for DOE to definitively
evaluate the economic justification for a
potential standard level (thereby
supporting or rebutting the results of
any preliminary determination of
economic justification).
IV. Methodology and Discussion of
Comments on Methodology
DOE used several analytical tools that
it developed previously and adapted for
use in this rulemaking. One is a
spreadsheet that calculates LCC and
PBP. Another tool calculates national
energy savings and national NPV. DOE
also used the Government Regulatory
Impact Model (GRIM), along with other
methods, in its MIA. Finally, DOE
developed an approach using the
National Energy Modeling System
(NEMS) to estimate impacts of energy
efficiency standards for commercial
refrigeration equipment on electric
utilities and the environment. The TSD
appendices discuss each of these
analytical tools in detail. 73 FR 50079–
108.
As a basis for this final rule, DOE has
continued to use the spreadsheets and
approaches explained in the August
2008 NOPR. DOE used the same general
methodology as applied in the August
2008 NOPR, but revised some of the
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assumptions and inputs for the final
rule in response to stakeholder
comments. The following paragraphs
discuss these revisions.
A. Market and Technology Assessment
When beginning an energy
conservation standards rulemaking,
DOE develops information that provides
an overall picture of the market for the
equipment concerned, including the
purpose of the equipment, the industry
structure, and market characteristics.
This activity includes both quantitative
and qualitative assessments based
primarily on publicly available
information. DOE presented various
subjects in the market and technology
assessment for this rulemaking. (See the
August 2008 NOPR and chapter 3 of the
NOPR TSD.) These include equipment
definitions, equipment classes,
manufacturers, quantities and types of
equipment sold and offered for sale,
retail market trends, and regulatory and
nonregulatory programs.
1. Definitions Related to Commercial
Refrigeration Equipment
a. Air-Curtain Angle Definition
For equipment without doors, an air
curtain divides the refrigerated
compartment from the ambient space.
DOE proposed the following definition
of air-curtain angle in the August 2008
NOPR that is consistent with the
industry-approved standards: ‘‘Aircurtain angle means: (1) For equipment
without doors and without a discharge
air grille or discharge air honeycomb,
the angle between a vertical line
extended down from the highest point
on the manufacturer’s recommended
load limit line and the load limit line
itself, when the equipment is viewed in
cross-section; and (2) For all other
equipment without doors, the angle
formed between a vertical line and the
straight line drawn by connecting the
point at the inside edge of the discharge
air opening with the point at the inside
edge of the return air opening, when the
equipment is viewed in cross-section.’’
73 FR 50080; 50135. DOE did not
receive any additional comments on the
definition of air-curtain angle in
response to the August 2008 NOPR;
thus, DOE is adopting these definitions
as proposed.
b. Door Angle Definition
The door orientation affects the
energy consumption of equipment with
doors. This equipment can be broadly
categorized by the angle of the door. In
the August 2008 NOPR, DOE proposed
the following definition of door angle:
‘‘(1) For equipment with flat doors, the
angle between a vertical line and the
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line formed by the plane of the door,
when the equipment is viewed in crosssection; and (2) For equipment with
curved doors, the angle formed between
a vertical line and the straight line
drawn by connecting the top and bottom
points where the display area glass joins
the cabinet, when the equipment is
viewed in cross-section.’’ 73 FR 50080;
50135. DOE did not receive any
additional comments on the definition
of door angle in response to the August
2008 NOPR; thus, DOE is adopting the
definition as proposed.
c. Ice-Cream Freezer Definition
During the NOPR public meeting,
interested parties expressed concern
about the definition of an ‘‘ice-cream
freezer’’ as used in this rulemaking.
Hussman stated that using the term ‘‘ice
cream’’ to refer to a temperature range
might be confusing because ice cream is
also a product. (Hussman, Public
Meeting Transcript, No. 27 at p. 15) 6
Southern Store Fixtures expressed a
similar concern, adding that other types
of frozen items, such as frozen juice,
may be displayed in ice-cream type
cases. (Southern Store Fixtures, Public
Meeting Transcript, No. 27 at p. 18)
As described in the July 2007 ANOPR,
the EPCA provision that required this
rulemaking identifies specifically the
categories ‘‘ice-cream freezers,’’ ‘‘selfcontained commercial refrigerators,
freezers, and refrigerator-freezers
without doors,’’ and ‘‘remote
condensing commercial refrigerators,
freezers, and refrigerator-freezers.’’ (42
1099
U.S.C. 6313(c)(4)(A), added by EPACT
2005, section 136(c)) Because the term
‘‘ice-cream freezers’’ was specified in
EPCA, the term ‘‘ice cream’’ is
appropriate to describe that specific
equipment category in this rulemaking,
and DOE is therefore maintaining the
use of that term in the rulemaking. Also,
see section IV.A.2 of this final rule.
d. Equipment Configuration Definitions
The configuration of commercial
refrigeration equipment affects its
energy consumption and the equipment
classes into which this equipment is
divided. In the August 2008 NOPR, DOE
proposed five definitions of equipment
configurations, shown in Table IV–1. 73
FR 50081; 50135.
TABLE IV–1—EQUIPMENT CONFIGURATION DEFINITIONS
Equipment family
Description
Vertical Open (VOP) ..................................
Semivertical Open (SVO) ..........................
Horizontal Open (HZO) ..............................
Vertical Closed (VC) ..................................
Horizontal Closed (HC) ..............................
Equipment
Equipment
Equipment
Equipment
Equipment
without doors and an air-curtain angle ≥0 degrees and <10 degrees from the vertical.
without doors and an air-curtain angle ≥10 degrees and <80 degrees from the vertical.
without doors and an air-curtain angle ≥80 degrees from the vertical.
with hinged or sliding doors and a door angle <45 degrees.
with hinged or sliding doors and a door angle ≥45 degrees.
e. Hybrid and Wedge Case Definitions
As stated in the August 2008 NOPR,
certain types of equipment meet the
definition of ‘‘commercial refrigeration
equipment’’ (Section 136(a)(3) of EPACT
2005), but do not fall directly into any
of the 38 equipment classes defined in
the market and technology assessment.
Among these types are hybrid cases and
wedge cases; DOE proposed definitions
for these in the August 2008 NOPR.
Because DOE did not receive any
additional comments on the definitions
of ‘‘commercial hybrid refrigerators,
freezers, and refrigerator-freezers’’ or on
the definition of ‘‘wedge case,’’ DOE is
adopting these definitions as proposed
in section 431.62.
Commercial refrigerators, commercial
freezers, and commercial refrigeratorfreezers can be divided into various
equipment classes categorized largely by
physical characteristics that affect
energy efficiency. Some of these
characteristics delineate the categories
of equipment covered by this
rulemaking.7 Most affect the
merchandise that the equipment can be
used to display and how the customer
can access that merchandise. Key
physical characteristics that affect
energy efficiency are the operating
temperature, the presence or absence of
doors (i.e., closed cases or open cases),
the type of doors used (i.e., transparent
or solid), the angle of the door or aircurtain (i.e., horizontal, semivertical, or
vertical), and the type of condensing
unit (i.e., remote or self-contained). As
discussed in the August 2008 NOPR, 73
FR 50080–83, DOE is adopting
equipment classes in this rulemaking
by: (1) Dividing commercial
refrigerators, commercial freezers, and
commercial refrigerator-freezers into
equipment families; (2) subdividing
these families based on condensing unit
configurations and rating temperature
designations; and (3) identifying the
resulting classes that are within each of
the three equipment categories covered
by this rulemaking. Because DOE did
not receive any comments in response
to the presentation of equipment classes
in the August 2008 NOPR, DOE is
adopting the equipment classes as
proposed without further modification.
Table IV–2 presents the equipment
classes covered under this rulemaking,
organized by the three equipment
categories.
6 A notation in the form ‘‘Hussman, Public
Meeting Transcript, No. 27 at p. 15’’ identifies an
oral comment that DOE received during the
September 23, 2008, NOPR public meeting. This
comment was recorded in the public meeting
transcript in the docket for this rulemaking (Docket
No. EE–2006–STD–0126), maintained in the
Resource Room of the Building Technologies
Program. This particular notation refers to a
comment (1) made during the public meeting by
Hussman; (2) recorded in document number 27,
which is the public meeting transcript filed in the
docket of this rulemaking; and (3) appearing on
page 15 of document number 27.
7 ‘‘Commercial refrigerators, commercial freezers,
and commercial refrigerator-freezers’’ is a type of
covered commercial equipment. For purposes of
discussion only in this proceeding, DOE uses the
term ‘‘categories’’ to designate groupings of
‘‘commercial refrigeration equipment.’’ The
categories of equipment are: Self-contained
commercial refrigerators, commercial freezers, and
commercial refrigerator-freezers without doors;
remote condensing commercial refrigerators,
commercial freezers, and commercial refrigeratorfreezers; and commercial ice-cream freezers. DOE
will analyze specific equipment classes that fall
within these general categories and set appropriate
standards.
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DOE did not receive any additional
comments on the definitions of the five
configurations; thus, DOE is adopting
these definitions as proposed.
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2. Equipment Classes
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TABLE IV–2—COMMERCIAL REFRIGERATION EQUIPMENT CLASSES BY CATEGORY
Operating
temperature
(°F)
Equipment
class
designation
Equipment category
Condensing unit configuration
Equipment family
Remote Condensing Commercial
Refrigerators, Commercial Freezers, and Commercial RefrigeratorFreezers.
Remote ............................................
Vertical Open ...................................
≥32
<32
VOP.RC.M
VOP.RC.L
Semivertical Open ...........................
≥32
<32
≥32
<32
≥32
<32
≥32
<32
≥32
<32
≥32
<32
≥32
<32
≥32
<32
SVO.RC.M
SVO.RC.L
HZO.RC.M
HZO.RC.L
VCT.RC.M
VCT.RC.L
HCT.RC.M
HCT.RC.L
VCS.RC.M
VCS.RC.L
HCS.RC.M
HCS.RC.L
SOC.RC.M
SOC.RC.L
VOP.SC.M
VOP.SC.L
≥32
<32
≥32
<32
* ≤¥5
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
SVO.SC.M
SVO.SC.L
HZO.SC.M
HZO.SC.L
VOP.RC.I
SVO.RC.I
HZO.RC.I
VCT.RC.I
HCT.RC.I
VCS.RC.I
HCS.RC.I
SOC.RC.I
VOP.SC.I
SVO.SC.I
HZO.SC.I
VCT.SC.I
HCT.SC.I
VCS.SC.I
HCS.SC.I
SOC.SC.I
Horizontal Open ...............................
Vertical Closed Transparent ............
Horizontal Closed Transparent ........
Vertical Closed Solid .......................
Horizontal Closed Solid ...................
Service Over Counter ......................
Self-Contained Commercial Refrigerators, Commercial Freezers,
and Commercial RefrigeratorFreezers without Doors.
Self-Contained .................................
Vertical Open ...................................
Semivertical Open ...........................
Horizontal Open ...............................
Commercial Ice-Cream Freezers .....
Remote ............................................
Self-Contained .................................
Vertical Open ...................................
Semivertical Open ...........................
Horizontal Open ...............................
Vertical Closed Transparent ............
Horizontal Closed Transparent ........
Vertical Closed Solid .......................
Horizontal Closed Solid ...................
Service Over Counter ......................
Vertical Open ...................................
Semivertical Open ...........................
Horizontal Open ...............................
Vertical Closed Transparent ............
Horizontal Closed Transparent ........
Vertical Closed Solid .......................
Horizontal Closed Solid ...................
Service Over Counter ......................
* Ice-cream freezer is defined in 10 CFR 431.62 as a commercial freezer designed to operate at or below ¥5 °F (¥21 °C) and that the manufacturer designs, markets, or intends for the storing, displaying, or dispensing of ice cream.
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B. Engineering Analysis
1. Approach
The engineering analysis develops
cost-efficiency relationships to show the
manufacturing costs of achieving
increased efficiency. As discussed in the
August 2008 NOPR, DOE used the
design-option approach, involving
consultation with outside experts,
review of publicly available cost and
performance information, and modeling
of equipment cost and energy
consumption. 73 FR 50083–50093.
Chapter 5 of the NOPR TSD contained
detailed discussion of the engineering
analysis methodology. In response to
the August 2008 NOPR, DOE received a
number of comments on the engineering
analysis methodology. These comments,
and DOE’s response, are detailed in the
following paragraphs.
For the NOPR, DOE adopted a designoptions approach for the engineering
analysis. The methodology DOE used to
perform the design-option analysis is
described in detail in chapter 5 of the
TSD. DOE used industry-supplied data,
which were developed using an
efficiency-level approach, to validate
DOE data. DOE received no further
comments on the design-options
approach and, as a result, made no
changes to this methodology for the
final rule.
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2. Analytical Models
a. Cost Model
In the engineering analysis, DOE
establishes the relationship between
manufacturer production cost and
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energy consumption for the commercial
refrigeration equipment covered in this
rulemaking. In determining this
relationship, DOE estimated the
incremental manufacturer production
costs associated with technological
changes that reduce the energy
consumption of the baseline models
(i.e., design options).
During the NOPR public meeting, the
American Council for an EnergyEfficient Economy (ACEEE) stated that
DOE’s method of estimating
manufacturer production costs based on
a snapshot analysis of available
engineering options is flawed, because
historical data for other building
technologies show that incremental
costs of complying with standards have
been much lower than DOE estimated.
ACEEE attributed this to manufacturers
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redesigning their processes to meet new
energy conservation standards. (ACEEE,
Public Meeting Transcript, No. 27 at
p. 28) AHRI disagreed with ACEEE and
cited the residential central airconditioner rulemaking as an example
of where the actual cost of equipment
was much higher than DOE estimated.
(AHRI, Public Meeting Transcript, No.
27 at p. 29) However, ACEEE responded
that this was because commodity prices
increased dramatically for that
equipment and that once this was
accounted for, the observed price
increase in baseline residential airconditioner units was 2 percent lower
than DOE’s estimate. (ACEEE, Public
Meeting Transcript, No. 27 at p. 30)
Appliance Standards Awareness Project
(ASAP) added that a retrospective
analysis would be useful for helping
DOE evaluate its model for predicting
costs. (ASAP, Public Meeting
Transcript, No. 27 at p. 31) ACEEE also
commented that DOE’s model for
assessing the cost and value of energy
conservation standards is flawed,
because the model fails to account for
manufacturer learning curves. Over
time, the price of most equipment drops
as more units are produced, regardless
of the efficiency standards placed on
them. Therefore, DOE’s assumption that
greater efficiency standards will cause
equipment prices to increase is not
valid. (ACEEE, No. 31 at p. 1) A
comment submitted by representatives
of ACEEE, Appliance Standards
Awareness Project, Alliance to Save
Energy, California Energy Commission,
Natural Resources Defense Council,
Northeast Energy Efficiency
Partnerships, Northwest Power and
Conservation Council, Pacific Gas and
Electric Company, Sempra Energy
Utilities, and Southern California
Edison (hereafter referred to as the Joint
Comment) agreed with ACEEE that
DOE’s engineering analysis
methodology should take manufacturer
learning curves into account. (Joint
Comment, No. 34 at p. 6)
The cost-efficiency curves that DOE
presented in the NOPR TSD showed
incremental costs of implementing
design option changes above the
baseline. The cost-efficiency curves are
not intended to capture future
economies of scale, or other related cost
reductions that may or may not result
from increased cumulative production
over time. DOE acknowledges that
manufacturing efficiency evolves over
time, but notes that earlier trends do not
necessarily reflect future trends. DOE
has insufficient data to project final
minimized unit costs of newer
technologies. DOE believes that
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thorough and rigorous manufacturing
cost analysis based on actual equipment
at all efficiency levels represents the
most effective and appropriate way to
estimate current and near-term
incremental manufacturing costs.
Therefore, DOE has used available
information on existing design options
in the cost-efficiency analysis.
i. LED Price Projections
DOE estimates the economic impacts
of the proposed standards based on
current costs of technologically feasible
energy saving design options used in
commercial refrigeration equipment.
One such technology, which has been a
focal point in this rulemaking, is solidstate lighting (i.e., LEDs). For the
ANOPR, DOE based LED lighting costs
on a retrofit case study, but revised its
assumptions for the NOPR after
gathering information from LED chip
and fixture manufacturers. These
changes caused the original equipment
manufacturer (OEM) cost (i.e., the cost
to commercial refrigeration equipment
manufacturers) of LED fixtures to
increase for both open refrigeration
cases and refrigeration cases with
transparent doors. Based on these
revised costs, DOE tentatively rejected
TSL 5 (i.e., the efficiency level where
LEDs were first implemented for most
equipment classes) because it was not
economically feasible.
However, DOE conducted a
sensitivity analysis for the NOPR to
gauge the effect of expected LED price
reductions. That analysis estimated NPV
and LCC values for equipment classes if
projected LED prices were used in
DOE’s analysis. DOE’s Multi-Year
Program Plan was used to estimate the
reduction in LED chip price by 2012.8
The sensitivity analysis used an
estimated reduction in LED chip price
of 80 percent by 2012, which
represented a 50-percent reduction in
overall LED system cost, assuming the
costs of the power supply and LED
fixtures did not change significantly
from the values used in the engineering
analysis. DOE recognized that if these
projected reductions were to be realized
or exceeded, the economic impacts of
this standard could change significantly,
possibly making higher TSLs
economically justified. Therefore, in the
NOPR, DOE requested comment on all
aspects of the LED issue, specifically
soliciting any information or data that
8 U.S. Department of Energy, Solid-State Lighting
Research and Development, Multi-Year Program
Plan FY’09–FY’14. This document was prepared
under the direction of a Technical Committee from
the Next Generation Lighting Initiative Alliance
(NGLIA). Information about NGLIA and its
members is available at https://www.nglia.org.
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1101
could increase confidence in the price
projections.
DOE received several comments.
ASAP, Natural Resources Defense
Council (NRDC), Earthjustice, and the
Joint Comment all expressed support for
the use of DOE LED price projections.
They stated that the projections are
sufficiently justified and would be a
more adequate basis for the standard
than the assumption that LED prices
will remain constant at 2007 levels.
(ASAP, No. 27 at p. 100; NRDC, Public
Meeting Transcript, No. 27 at p. 105;
Earthjustice, Public Meeting Transcript,
No. 27 at p. 106; Joint Comment, No. 34
at p. 2) Pacific Gas and Electric
Company, Southern California Edison,
and Sempra Energy Utilities (Southern
California Gas and San Diego Gas and
Electric Company) (hereafter the
California Utilities Joint Comment)
suggested that the DOE projections
might be too conservative. (California
Utilities Joint Comment, No. 41 at p. 3)
ACEEE agreed, attributing this
underestimation to the exclusion of
scale-dependent factors. ACEEE stated
that as LED production scales up, there
will be greater price reductions and
increased quality in terms of
reproducibility. (ACEEE, No. 31 at p. 7
and Public Meeting Transcript, No. 27 at
p. 111) As evidence of the validity of
DOE LED cost projections, the California
Utilities Joint Comment stated that LED
prices have already dropped rapidly,
rendering DOE analyses based on 2007
prices obsolete. It suggested that the
price of LED lighting for use in
refrigeration has already fallen by
roughly 10 percent since 2007.
(California Utilities Joint Comment, No.
41 at p. 13) The California Utilities Joint
Comment also stated that LED prices
will continue to drop after 2012, a fact
that should be considered in the NPV
analyses. (California Utilities Joint
Comment, No. 41 at p. 8)
For today’s final rule, DOE updated
the LED costs to represent the current
cost of LEDs. DOE did not receive any
data providing a greater level of
confidence that LED price reductions
would occur. However, LED costs have
decreased and the costs used in the
NOPR engineering analysis no longer
represent the current cost of LEDs.
While considerable information is
available that suggests LED prices are
likely to decline by at least as much as
DOE’s sensitivity analysis assumed,
DOE is not using this information as the
basis of its analysis due to a lack of
certainty about the timing and success
of LED research and product
development. See section V.A.2. a for
more detail on the updated LED lighting
assumptions.
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ii. Material Price Projections
As discussed in the August 2008
NOPR, DOE performed a sensitivity
analysis to explore the effects of future
LED fixture prices on commercial
refrigeration equipment prices in the
engineering analysis. During the NOPR
public meeting, AHRI commented that if
DOE were to include LED price
projections in the technical analyses,
equivalent actions should be taken for
other materials that also have shown
recent price variability (i.e.,
refrigerants). (AHRI, Public Meeting
Transcript, No. 27 at p. 102) AHRI
believes commodity prices are likely to
change significantly, which would affect
equipment costs and change efficiency
trends. AHRI cited the potential change
in costs of hydrofluorocarbon
refrigerants (HFCs) if pending
legislation capping those refrigerants is
passed. (AHRI, No. 33 at p. 3) True
Manufacturing Company (True) added
that the industry is already using
cheaper, less efficient substitute
materials to produce heat transfer
devices in response to rising copper
prices. (True, Public Meeting Transcript,
No. 27 at p. 104)
As stated above, DOE did not use LED
price projections in the final rule due to
a lack of certainty about the timing and
extent to which the projections would
be realized. Similarly, DOE also did not
include material price projections in the
final rule analysis.
b. Energy Consumption Model
The energy consumption model
estimates the daily energy consumption
of commercial refrigeration equipment
at various performance levels using a
design-options approach. The model is
specific to the categories of equipment
covered under this rulemaking, but is
sufficiently generalized to model the
energy consumption of all covered
equipment classes. For a given
equipment class, the model estimates
the daily energy consumption for the
baseline and the energy consumption of
several levels of performance above the
baseline. The model is used to calculate
each performance level separately. For
the NOPR, DOE updated its radiation
load calculations by revising its
assumptions for the view factor and
changed its calculation method for
infiltration load by replacing defrost
melt-water with infiltrated air. 73 FR
50086. No comments were received in
response to these changes. Therefore,
DOE maintained these revised
calculation methodologies for the final
rule.
3. Equipment Classes Analyzed
For the final rule, DOE did not make
any changes to the equipment classes
directly analyzed in the NOPR
engineering analysis. Table IV–3 shows
the 15 equipment classes DOE directly
analyzed.
TABLE IV—3 EQUIPMENT CLASSES DIRECTLY ANALYZED IN THE ENGINEERING ANALYSIS
Equipment class
Description
VOP.RC.M ...............
VOP.RC.L ................
SVO.RC.M ...............
HZO.RC.M ...............
HZO.RC.L ................
VCT.RC.M ...............
VCT.RC.L ................
SOC.RC.M ...............
VOP.SC.M ...............
SVO.SC.M ...............
HZO.SC.M ...............
HZO.SC.L ................
VCT.SC.I ..................
VCS.SC.I .................
HCT.SC.I .................
Vertical Refrigerator without Doors with a Remote Condensing Unit, Medium Temperature.
Vertical Freezer without Doors with a Remote Condensing Unit, Low Temperature.
Semivertical Refrigerator without Doors with a Remote Condensing Unit, Medium Temperature.
Horizontal Refrigerator without Doors with a Remote Condensing Unit, Medium Temperature.
Horizontal Freezer without Doors with a Remote Condensing Unit, Low Temperature.
Vertical Refrigerator with Transparent Doors with a Remote Condensing Unit, Medium Temperature.
Vertical Freezer with Transparent Doors with a Remote Condensing Unit, Low Temperature.
Service Over Counter Refrigerator with a Remote Condensing Unit, Medium Temperature.
Vertical Refrigerator without Doors with a Self-Contained Condensing Unit, Medium Temperature.
Semivertical Refrigerator without Doors with a Self-Contained Condensing Unit, Medium Temperature.
Horizontal Refrigerator without Doors with a Self-Contained Condensing Unit, Medium Temperature.
Horizontal Freezer without Doors with a Self-Contained Condensing Unit, Low Temperature.
Vertical Ice-Cream Freezer with Transparent Doors with a Self-Contained Condensing Unit, Ice-Cream Temperature.
Vertical Ice-Cream Freezer with Solid Doors with a Self-Contained Condensing Unit, Ice-Cream Temperature.
Horizontal Ice-Cream Freezer with Transparent Doors with a Self-Contained Condensing Unit, Ice-Cream Temperature.
4. Wedge Cases
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In the August 2008 NOPR, DOE
considered remote condensing and selfcontained wedge cases as covered
equipment.9 DOE proposed that the
calculated daily energy consumption
(CDEC) or total daily energy
consumption (TDEC) be measured
according to the ANSI/ASHRAE
Standard 72–2005 test procedure.10
9 If a wedge case does not include a refrigeration
component and simply serves as a miter transition
piece between two other cases, then it does not
meet the definition of commercial refrigeration
equipment, and is not covered under this
rulemaking.
10 In the August 2008 NOPR, the test procedure
cited was ANSI/ASHRAE Standard 72–2005.
However, the test procedure DOE adopted into
section 431.64 of 10 CFR Part 431 is ARI Standard
1200–2006, which specifically references ANSI/
ASHRAE Standard 72–2005 as the method of
testing commercial refrigeration equipment. 71 FR
71356 DOE notes that ARI Standard 1200–2006
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DOE also proposed that the maximum
daily energy consumption (MDEC) for
each model shall be the amount derived
by incorporating into the standards
equation for the appropriate equipment
class a value for the TDA that is the
product of: (1) The vertical height of the
air curtain or glass (in a transparent
door), and (2) the largest overall width
of the case when viewed from the front.
73 FR 50113. In the NOPR, DOE sought
comment regarding appropriate
standard levels for wedge cases, but did
not receive any comments on this
specific proposal.
Hussman, Hill Phoenix, and AHRI
commented that wedge cases should be
would give identical test results for the
measurement of energy consumption as ANSI/
ASHRAE Standard 72–2005. Therefore, for today’s
final rule, DOE is referencing ARI Standard 1200–
2006 for the measurement of CDEC and TDEC of
wedge cases.
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excluded from this rulemaking because
they are niche products that do not
represent a significant part of the
commercial refrigeration industry.
(Hussman, No. 42 at p. 2; Hill Phoenix,
No. 32 at p. 6; AHRI, No. 33 at p. 5) Hill
Phoenix further states that most
supermarkets and grocery stores do not
use wedge cases at all, and those that do
will only use a few within a store
because they are much more expensive
per linear foot than a standard case.
(Hill Phoenix, Public Meeting
Transcript, No. 27 at p. 18) Hussman
further states that wedge cases use less
than 0.5 percent of the total energy
consumed by the supermarket industry
and represent only 1.5 percent of the
cases shipped. (Hussman, No. 42 at p.
2) DOE acknowledges that wedge cases
are niche equipment and do not
represent a significant market share in
the commercial refrigeration equipment
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industry. However, market share is not
a basis for rejecting an equipment
category from consideration in the
rulemaking. Therefore, DOE concludes
that wedge cases are covered in this
rulemaking.
Hill Phoenix and AHRI also
commented that wedge cases should be
excluded from this rulemaking because
there are no test procedures in place to
test wedges since ARI Standard 1200–
2006 excludes wedges from its scope of
coverage. (Hill Phoenix, No. 32 at p. 2;
AHRI, No. 33 at p. 5) As stated in the
July 2007 ANOPR, EPCA directs DOE to
set standards for commercial
refrigeration equipment (i.e., the three
categories of equipment identified
above). Any equipment that meets the
EPCA definition of a ‘‘commercial
refrigerator, freezer, or refrigeratorfreezer’’ and falls under one of these
three categories will be covered by this
rulemaking. In the December 2006 final
rule, DOE incorporated by reference
certain sections of ARI Standard 1200–
2006 as the test procedure for
commercial refrigeration equipment, but
did not reference section 2.2, which
provides exclusions for certain
equipment such as wedge cases.11 The
equipment excluded in this section of
ARI Standard 1200–2006 will only be
excluded from this rulemaking if they
do not meet the EPACT 2005 definition
of a ‘‘commercial refrigerator, freezer, or
refrigerator-freezer.’’ 12 72 FR 41169
DOE believes that the EPACT 2005
definition of a ‘‘commercial refrigerator,
freezer, or refrigerator-freezer’’ is
sufficiently broad that it includes wedge
cases. Therefore, DOE has concluded
that wedge cases are properly covered in
this rulemaking.
Hussman, Hill Phoenix, and AHRI
also commented that wedge cases
should be excluded from this
11 ARI Standard 1200–2006 refers to wedge cases
as ‘‘miter transition display merchandisers used as
a corner section between two refrigerated display
merchandisers.’’
12 ‘‘(9)(A) The term ‘commercial refrigerator,
freezer, and refrigerator-freezer’ means refrigeration
equipment that—
(i) Is not a consumer product (as defined in
section 321of EPCA [42 U.S.C. 6291(1)]);
(ii) Is not designed and marketed exclusively for
medical, scientific, or research purposes;
(iii) Operates at a chilled, frozen, combination
chilled and frozen, or variable temperature;
(iv) Displays or stores merchandise and other
perishable materials horizontally, semivertically, or
vertically;
(v) Has transparent or solid doors, sliding or
hinged doors, a combination of hinged, sliding,
transparent, or solid doors, or no doors;
(vi) Is designed for pull-down temperature
applications or holding temperature applications;
and
(vii) Is connected to a self-contained condensing
unit or to a remote condensing unit.’’ (42 U.S.C.
6311(9)(A))
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rulemaking because they do not
function effectively and cannot be tested
as a stand-alone merchandiser since
they require straight cases of the same
model on either side. This configuration
makes accurate performance testing of
wedges nearly impossible and no
specific testing guidelines for wedges
exist within ANSI/ASHRAE Standard
72–2005 or ANSI/ARI Standard 1200–
6006. (Hussman, No. 42 at p. 2; Hill
Phoenix, No. 32 at p. 6; AHRI, No. 33
at p. 5) DOE acknowledges that there is
no specific guidance in the ANSI/
ASHRAE Standard 72–2005 or ARI
Standard 1200–2006 test procedures
that addresses the proper operation of
wedge cases. However, DOE believes
that wedge cases are not significantly
different from normal display cases
used in between other display cases
(i.e., cases within a display case line-up)
in terms of operation and the ability to
be tested. A wedge case and a normal
case within a display case line-up both
have display cases adjacent to them in
normal operation and do not have end
panels installed on their sides. DOE
expects that wedge cases and cases
within a display case line-up should be
tested in the same manner under the test
procedure.
Hussman and Hill Phoenix also
commented that wedge cases should be
excluded from this rulemaking because
the TDA for inside wedges approaches
zero. Therefore, standards for such cases
are not meaningful because the TDA in
the standards equation is zero.
(Hussman, Public Meeting Transcript,
No. 27 at p. 16; Hill Phoenix, Public
Meeting Transcript, No. 27 at p. 19) As
stated above, DOE proposed language in
the August 2008 NOPR to specifically
address the TDA issue of wedge cases.
DOE proposed that for remote
condensing and self-contained wedge
cases, the CDEC or TDEC shall be
measured according to the ANSI/
ASHRAE Standard 72–2005 Test
Procedure. DOE also proposed that the
MDEC for each model shall be the
amount derived by incorporating into
the standards equation for the
appropriate equipment class a value for
the TDA that is the product of: (1) The
vertical height of the air curtain or glass
(in a transparent door), and (2) the
largest overall width of the case, when
viewed from the front.10 73 FR 50113.
(See section VI.A.1.) This procedure is
conservative because it allows for the
widest horizontal dimension of the
display case to be used in determining
TDA. That is, using this procedure, the
standards for a wedge case would be
less stringent than a normal display
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1103
case, in the same equipment class, of
equal refrigerated volume.
If a manufacturer finds that meeting
the standard for wedge cases would
cause hardship, inequity, or unfair
distribution of burdens, the
manufacturer may petition OHA for
exception relief or exemption from the
standard pursuant to OHA’s authority
under section 504 of the DOE
Organization Act (42 U.S.C. 7194), as
implemented at subpart B of 10 CFR
part 1003. OHA has the authority to
grant such relief on a case-by-case basis
if it determines that a manufacturer has
demonstrated that meeting the standard
would cause hardship, inequity, or
unfair distribution of burdens.
5. Ice-Cream Freezers—Temperature
Range
In the test procedure final rule for
commercial refrigeration equipment,
DOE established the definition of icecream freezer as ‘‘a commercial freezer
that is designed to operate at or below
¥5 °F (¥21 °C) and that the
manufacturer designs, markets, or
intends for the storing, displaying, or
dispensing of ice cream.’’ 71 FR 71369–
70. DOE incorporated the test procedure
into its regulations in 10 CFR 431.62.
Under this definition, unless equipment
is designed, marketed, or intended
specifically for the storage, display or
dispensing of ice cream, it would not be
considered an ice-cream freezer. For
example, multi-purpose commercial
freezers manufactured for storing and
displaying frozen foods in addition to
ice cream and designed to operate at or
below ¥5 °F (¥21 °C) would not meet
this definition. Thus, DOE would not
treat them as commercial ice-cream
freezers in this rulemaking. However,
any commercial freezer that is
specifically manufactured for storing,
displaying, or dispensing ice cream and
is designed for normal operation at or
below ¥5 °F would meet the definition.
Other equipment that meet the
definition include freezers designed to
operate considerably below ¥5 °F and
are specifically designed for ice cream
storage (e.g., ‘‘hardening’’ cabinets), as
well as ice-cream dipping cabinets
designed to operate below ¥5 °F. For
the NOPR, DOE expanded the definition
used to categorize a unit’s rating
temperature by including a specific
operating temperature range for
medium-temperature, low-temperature,
and ice-cream temperature applications.
Hill Phoenix and AHRI commented
on the proposed temperature ranges for
low-temperature and ice-cream
temperature freezers. Hill Phoenix, in
agreement with AHRI, stated that the
operating range for low-temperature
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cases should be changed to less than 32
°F and greater than ¥15 °F, and the
operating range for ice-cream
temperature cases be changed to less
than or equal to ¥15 °F. Hill Phoenix
and AHRI stated that freezers that
operate below ¥15 °F are constructed
differently than cases that operate in the
¥5 °F to ¥10 °F range. Hill Phoenix
stated that DOE’s current temperature
range designations would require
freezers that operate in the ¥5 °F to
¥10 °F range to be rated at ¥15 °F.
(Hill Phoenix, No. 32 at p. 4; AHRI, No.
33 at p. 4)
As previously stated, ice-cream
freezers are defined by the test
procedure, which states that an icecream freezer is ‘‘a commercial freezer
that is designed to operate at or below
¥5 °F (¥21 °C) and that the
manufacturer designs, markets, or
intends for the storing, displaying, or
dispensing of ice cream.’’ 71 FR 71369;
10 CFR 431.62. Based on the comments
from AHRI and Hill Phoenix discussed
above, DOE is modifying the operating
temperature ranges used to define each
type of equipment from the temperature
ranges that were used in the NOPR. For
today’s final rule, DOE is organizing
equipment classes based on the three
operating temperature ranges shown in
Table IV–4. For today’s final rule, DOE
will continue to classify equipment as
medium temperature (refrigerators), low
temperature (freezers), or ice-cream
temperature (ice-cream freezers).
Furthermore, DOE maintains the
required rating temperatures as
specified in the test procedure final
rule: 38 °F (±2 °F) for commercial
refrigerators and refrigerator
compartments, 0 °F (±2 °F) for
commercial freezers and freezer
compartments, and ¥15 °F (±2 °F) for
commercial ice-cream freezers. 71 FR
71370.
TABLE IV–4—RATING TEMPERATURE DESIGNATIONS
Rating temperature
(°F)
Operating temperature (°F)
≥32 (M) .................................................................................................
<32 (L) ..................................................................................................
≤¥5 (I) * ................................................................................................
38
0
¥15
Description
Medium temperature (refrigerators).
Low temperature (freezers).
Ice-cream temperature (ice-cream freezers).
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES2
* Ice-cream freezer is defined in 10 CFR 431.62 as a commercial freezer that is designed to operate at or below ¥5 °F (¥21 °C) and that the
manufacturer designs, markets, or intends for the storing, displaying, or dispensing of ice cream.
6. Special Application Temperature
Cases
After the NOPR public meeting, DOE
received comments on including
‘‘application temperatures’’ for
commercial refrigeration equipment.
These are rating temperatures other than
the standard rating temperatures. Hill
Phoenix stated that some refrigerated
cases are designed for and operate at
medium temperature and hold foods
with temperature requirements that tend
to range from 10 °F to 20 °F. These cases
are not designed to operate at the rating
temperature of 0 °F. Hill Phoenix also
stated that the cases would have to be
redesigned to operate at the rating
temperature, which would cause them
to consume more energy. Therefore, Hill
Phoenix recommended that this type of
product be tested using the application
temperature at which the product is
designed to perform, but be required to
meet the low-temperature standard.
(Hill Phoenix, No. 32 at p. 4) AHRI
concurred with Hill Phoenix,
recommending that any case designed
specifically to hold products at
temperatures higher than the rating
temperature specified for that class be
tested at its application temperature and
must meet the energy standards of that
class. (AHRI, No. 33 at p. 5) However,
the Joint Comment cautioned that rating
specialty cases at application
temperatures could create loopholes
allowing equipment to be tested at an
application temperature different from
the temperature at which the equipment
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is designed to operate in the field. (Joint
Comment, No. 34 at p. 4)
In the test procedure final rule for
commercial refrigeration equipment,
DOE adopted ARI Standard 1200–2006
as the DOE test procedure for
commercial refrigeration equipment. 71
FR 71340, 71369–70; 10 CFR 431.63–
431.64. ANSI/ARI Standard 1200–2006
contains rating temperature
specifications of 38 °F (±2 °F) for
commercial refrigerators and refrigerator
compartments, and 0 °F (±2 °F) for
commercial freezers and freezer
compartments. In the test procedure
final rule, DOE also adopted a ¥15 °F
(±2 °F) rating temperature for
commercial ice-cream freezers. 71 FR
71370.
Requiring manufacturers to test
special application cases at one of the
three specified standard rating
temperatures (38 °F, 0 °F, and ¥ 15 °F)
instead of at their corresponding
application temperature could result in
higher energy consumption for these
cases if they have to be redesigned for
testing at the standard rating
temperature. However, DOE agrees with
the Joint Comment that allowing such
special application cases to be tested at
an application temperature that is
different from the temperature at which
the equipment is designed to operate in
the field could create loopholes.
Therefore, DOE is maintaining the
requirement that all equipment must be
tested at one of the three specified
standard rating temperatures adopted by
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DOE in the test procedure final rule. In
the example from Hill Phoenix, the
equipment is classified as a mediumtemperature unit, but the equipment is
designed to operate below 32 °F and
above ¥5 °F, thus categorizing it as a
low-temperature unit under today’s
final rule. Because it is a lowtemperature unit, it is required to be
tested at 0 °F (±2 °F).
Any manufacturer that is unable to
test such equipment at its designated
rating temperature must request a test
procedure waiver from DOE under the
provisions described in 10 CFR 431.401.
If the manufacturer believes that
meeting the standard would cause
hardship, inequity, or unfair
distribution of burdens, it may petition
OHA for exception relief from the
energy conservation standard pursuant
to OHA’s authority under section 504 of
the DOE Organization Act (42 U.S.C.
7194), as implemented at subpart B of
10 CFR part 1003. However, the
majority of equipment covered by this
rulemaking can be tested using the three
specified rating temperatures provided
in the test procedure.
7. Coverage of Remote Condensing Units
In the framework document, ANOPR,
and NOPR, DOE considered energy
conservation standards that covered
only the refrigerated cases of remote
condensing commercial refrigeration
equipment, and not the remote
condensing unit. DOE cited language in
EPACT 2005’s definitions for ‘‘self
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contained condensing unit’’ and
‘‘remote condensing unit’’ as a
justification for this approach. DOE
believes that, by definition, the remote
condensing units that support remote
condensing refrigeration equipment are
not considered an ‘‘integral part’’ of the
refrigeration equipment. (EPACT 2005,
Section 136(a)(3)) As a result, DOE
stated in the August 2008 NOPR that
remote condensing units would not be
considered in this rulemaking.
For the NOPR, the Joint Comment
stated that the scope of this rulemaking
should not be limited to the refrigerated
cabinets or display cases of remote
condensing systems. According to the
Joint Comment, regulating the remote
condensing units supporting these
cabinets has a significant potential to
save energy because these units account
for 90 percent of the total capacity of
commercial refrigeration equipment
subject to this rulemaking. (Joint
Comment, No. 34 at p. 7)
As stated in the framework document
and the July 2007 ANOPR, DOE does
not believe that the remote condensing
units of remote condensing refrigeration
equipment systems are considered part
of the equipment to which they are
connected. EPCA defines a ‘‘selfcontained condensing unit,’’ in part, as
an ‘‘assembly of refrigerating
components that is an integral part of
the refrigerated equipment * * *’’ (42
U.S.C. 6311(9)(F), added by EPACT
2005, section 136(a)(3)). EPCA also
defines a ‘‘remote condensing unit,’’ in
part, as an ‘‘assembly of refrigerating
components that is remotely located
from the refrigerated equipment * * *’’
(42 U.S.C. 6311(9)(E), added by EPACT
2005, section 136(a)(3)) The EPCA
definition of remote condensing unit
implies that the remote condensing unit
is not part of the refrigeration
equipment because it refers to the unit
and the refrigeration equipment as
separate entities. A remote condensing
unit functions as a supplement to
remote condensing refrigeration
equipment, but is not an ‘‘integral part.’’
Therefore, energy conservation
standards for remote condensing
commercial refrigerators, commercial
freezers, and commercial refrigeratorfreezers apply only to the refrigerated
equipment (i.e., storage cabinets and
display cases), but not to the remote
condensing units. For the final rule,
DOE maintains that the energy
conservation standards set for remote
condensing commercial refrigeration
equipment only apply to display cases,
not to the remote condensing units.
However, DOE has the authority to
classify industrial or commercial
equipment as covered under EPCA
section 341(a) and (b), if classification is
‘‘necessary’’ to improve the efficiency of
industrial equipment (which includes
commercial refrigeration equipment) in
order to conserve energy. (42 U.S.C.
6312(a) and (b)) If DOE were to add
remote condensing units as covered
equipment, DOE would undertake a
separate rulemaking process to consider
standards for these products in
accordance with EPCA section 341(a)
and (b).
8. Regulating Secondary Cooling
Applications
In the framework document, DOE
decided to exclude equipment designed
for secondary coolant applications.
DOE’s interpretation of the EPACT 2005
definitions of ‘‘commercial refrigerator,
freezer, and refrigerator-freezer’’ was
consistent with the ARI Standard 1200–
2006, which explicitly excludes
secondary coolant applications.
Following the framework document,
many interested parties, including ARI,
Southern Company, and EEI, agreed
with the exclusion of secondary coolant
applications in this rule because of their
insignificant presence in the market and
the complexity of modifying the test
procedure to accommodate them.
ACEEE, on the other hand, commented
that DOE should have a broad scope of
coverage and should, in general, cover
as much as possible in the rulemaking.
72 FR 41171.
After considering the framework
comments, DOE decided to continue to
exclude secondary coolant applications
from this rulemaking in the July 2007
ANOPR. Following the ANOPR,
commercial refrigeration manufacturers
expressed concerns that the exclusion of
secondary coolant systems could
provide a loophole if customers
purchased these lower efficiency
systems instead of regulated direct
expansion equipment. 73 FR 50106. For
1105
the NOPR, the Joint Comment restated
that DOE should consider secondary
coolant applications in its analysis.
(Joint Comment, No. 34 at p. 8)
Section 340(9)(A)(vii) of EPCA (42
U.S.C. 6311(9)(A)(vii), added by EPACT
2005, section 136(a)(3)) states that the
terms commercial refrigerator, freezer,
and refrigerator-freezer refer to
equipment that is connected to a selfcontained condensing unit or to a
remote condensing unit. DOE maintains
that this language excludes secondary
coolant applications from coverage in
this rulemaking because such
applications are not directly connected
to self-contained or remote condensing
units. 72 FR 41171. For this reason, DOE
is excluding secondary coolant
applications from this rule.
C. Markups To Determine Equipment
Price
In the August 2008 NOPR, DOE
explained how it developed the
distribution channel markups it used.
73 FR 50093–95. DOE did not receive
comments on these markups. However,
DOE updated the distribution channel
markups by including 2008 sales tax
data, and updated the markups for
commercial refrigeration equipment
wholesalers using 2008 financial data.
DOE used these markups, along with
sales taxes, installation costs, and
manufacturer selling prices (MSPs)
developed in the engineering analysis,
to arrive at the final installed equipment
prices for baseline and higher efficiency
commercial refrigeration equipment. As
explained in the August 2008 NOPR, 73
FR 50093–95, DOE defined three
distribution channels for commercial
refrigeration equipment to describe how
the equipment passes from the
manufacturer to the customer. DOE
developed market shares by distribution
channel for remote condensing and selfcontained equipment. DOE retained the
same distribution channel market shares
described in the August 2008 NOPR.
The new overall baseline and
incremental markups for sales to
supermarkets within each distribution
channel are shown in Table IV–5, Table
IV–6, Table IV–7, and Table IV–8.
Chapter 6 of the TSD provides
additional details on markups.
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES2
TABLE IV–5—BASELINE MARKUPS BY DISTRIBUTION CHANNEL INCLUDING SALES TAX FOR SELF-CONTAINED EQUIPMENT
IN SUPERMARKETS
Mechanical contractor (includes
wholesaler)
Wholesaler
Distributor(s) Markup .......................................................................
Sales Tax .........................................................................................
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1.370
1.069
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National account
(manufacturerdirect)
2.082
1.069
1.185
1.069
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TABLE IV–5—BASELINE MARKUPS BY DISTRIBUTION CHANNEL INCLUDING SALES TAX FOR SELF-CONTAINED EQUIPMENT
IN SUPERMARKETS—Continued
Mechanical contractor (includes
wholesaler)
Wholesaler
Overall Markup ................................................................................
National account
(manufacturerdirect)
2.226
1.267
1.465
Overall
1.672
TABLE IV–6—BASELINE MARKUPS BY DISTRIBUTION CHANNEL INCLUDING SALES TAX FOR REMOTE CONDENSING
EQUIPMENT IN SUPERMARKETS
Mechanical
contractor
(includes
wholesaler)
Wholesaler
Distributor(s) Markup .......................................................................
Sales Tax .........................................................................................
Overall Markup ................................................................................
1.370
1.069
1.465
National account
(manufacturerdirect)
2.082
1.069
2.226
Overall
1.185
1.069
1.267
1.347
1.069
1.440
TABLE IV–7—INCREMENTAL MARKUPS BY DISTRIBUTION CHANNEL INCLUDING SALES TAX FOR SELF-CONTAINED
EQUIPMENT IN SUPERMARKETS
Mechanical contractor (includes
wholesaler)
Wholesaler
Distributor(s) Markup .......................................................................
Sales Tax .........................................................................................
Overall Markup ................................................................................
National account
(manufacturerdirect)
1.370
1.069
1.465
1.057
1.069
1.130
1.114
1.069
1.191
Overall
1.186
1.069
1.268
TABLE IV–8—INCREMENTAL MARKUPS BY DISTRIBUTION CHANNEL INCLUDING SALES TAX FOR REMOTE CONDENSING
EQUIPMENT IN SUPERMARKETS
Mechanical contractor (includes
wholesaler)
Wholesaler
Distributor(s) Markup .......................................................................
Sales Tax .........................................................................................
Overall Markup ................................................................................
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES2
D. Energy Use Characterization
The energy use characterization
estimates the annual energy
consumption of commercial
refrigeration equipment systems
(including remote condensing units).
This estimate is used in the subsequent
LCC and PBP analyses (chapter 8 of the
TSD) and NIA (chapter 11 of the TSD).
For the August 2008 NOPR, DOE
estimated the energy consumption of
the 15 equipment classes analyzed in
the engineering analysis (chapter 5 of
the NOPR TSD) using the relevant test
procedure. DOE then validated these
energy consumption estimates with
annual whole-building simulation
modeling of selected equipment classes
and efficiency levels. 73 FR 50095. For
the final rule analyses, DOE used the
same methodology to estimate the
annual energy consumption of
commercial refrigeration systems
presented in the August 2008 NOPR.
See chapter 7 of the TSD for additional
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National account
(manufacturerdirect)
1.370
1.069
1.465
1.057
1.069
1.130
1.114
1.069
1.191
detail on the energy use
characterization.
DOE assumed for the energy analysis
24-hour operation of case lighting based
on input received during the ANOPR.
The California Utilities Joint Comment
stated that while many grocers in
California may shut down case lighting
for 8 hours per day, national trends may
be closer to 24-hour operation.
(California Utilities Joint Comment, No.
41 at p. 12) The California Utilities Joint
Comment also indicated that LED
lighting may be more likely to be
controlled on and off during the
operational day or dimmed based on
motion sensors, and that this can be
done without the risk of moisture or
startup problems common to fluorescent
fixtures. They further speculated that
retailers would take advantage of these
LED characteristics through different
operational scenarios. (California
Utilities Joint Comment, No. 41 at p. 12)
However, they provided no data to
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1.112
1.069
1.189
indicate the likelihood of a different
LED usage profile, and did not provide
costs to implement automatic or manual
control to support this comment. While
the potential for additional lighting
controls exists and LEDs may offer
additional controllability, the actual
likelihood and costs of implementation
are unknown. As a result, DOE did not
change its default assumption of 24hour operation based on these
comments. Additional detail on the
energy use characterization can be
found in chapter 7 of the TSD.
E. Life-Cycle Cost and Payback Period
Analyses
In response to the requirements of
section 325(o)(2)(B)(i) of EPCA, DOE
conducted LCC and PBP analyses to
evaluate the economic impacts of
possible new commercial refrigeration
equipment standards on individual
customers. DOE used the same
spreadsheet models to evaluate the LCC
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and PBP as it used for the NOPR;
however, DOE updated certain specific
inputs to the models. Details of the
spreadsheet model and of all the inputs
to the LCC and PBP analyses are in TSD
chapter 8. DOE conducted the LCC and
PBP analyses using a spreadsheet model
developed in Microsoft Excel for
Windows 2003.
The LCC is the total cost for a unit of
commercial refrigeration equipment
over the life of the equipment, including
purchase and installation expense and
operating costs (energy expenditures
and maintenance). To compute the LCC,
DOE summed the installed price of the
equipment and its lifetime operating
costs discounted to the time of
purchase. The PBP is the change in
purchase expense due to a given energy
conservation standard divided by the
change in first-year operating cost that
results from the standard. DOE
expresses PBP in years. DOE measures
the changes in LCC and in PBP
associated with a given energy use
standard level relative to a base case
equipment energy use. The base case
forecast reflects the market in the
absence of mandatory energy
conservation standards.
The data inputs to the PBP calculation
are the purchase expense (otherwise
known as the total installed customer
cost or first cost) and the annual
operating costs for each selected design.
The inputs to the equipment purchase
expense were the equipment price and
the installation cost, with appropriate
markups. The inputs to the operating
costs were the annual energy
consumption, the electricity price, and
the repair and maintenance costs. The
PBP calculation uses the same inputs as
the LCC analysis but, because it is a
simple payback, the operating cost is for
the year the standard takes effect,
assumed to be 2012. For each efficiency
level analyzed, the LCC analysis
required input data for the total
1107
installed cost of the equipment, the
operating cost, and the discount rate.
Table IV–9 summarizes the inputs
and key assumptions DOE used to
calculate the economic impacts of
various energy consumption levels on
customers. Equipment price, installation
cost, and baseline and standard design
selection affect the installed cost of the
equipment. Annual energy use,
electricity costs, electricity price trends,
and repair and maintenance costs affect
the operating cost. The effective date of
the standard, the discount rate, and the
lifetime of equipment affect the
calculation of the present value of
annual operating cost savings from a
proposed standard. Table IV–9 also
shows how DOE modified these inputs
and key assumptions for the final rule,
relative to the August 2008 NOPR. The
changes in the input data and the
discussion of the overall approach to the
LCC analysis are provided in chapter 8
of the TSD.
TABLE IV–9—SUMMARY OF INPUTS AND KEY ASSUMPTIONS USED IN THE LCC AND PBP ANALYSES
Input
NOPR description
Baseline Manufacturer Selling Price.
Price charged by manufacturer to either a wholesaler or
large customer for baseline equipment. Developed by
using industry-supplied efficiency level data and a
design option analysis.
Incremental change in manufacturer selling price for
equipment at each of the higher efficiency standard
levels. Developed by using a combination of energy
consumption level and design option analyses.
Associated with converting the manufacturer selling
price to a customer price (chapter 6 of TSD). Developed based on product distribution channels and
sales taxes.
Cost to the customer of installing the equipment. This
includes labor, overhead, and any miscellaneous materials and parts. The total installed cost equals the
customer equipment price plus the installation price.
Installation cost data provided by industry comment.
Site energy use associated with the use of commercial
refrigeration equipment, which includes only the use
of electricity by the equipment itself. Taken from engineering analysis and validated in energy use characterization. (chapter 7 of the TSD).
Established average commercial electricity price ($/
kWh) from EIA data for 2007, in 2007$. DOE then
established scaling factors for commercial refrigeration equipment consumers based on the 2003 Commercial Building Energy Consumption Survey.
Used the AEO2007 reference case to forecast future
electricity prices and extrapolated prices to 2042.
Labor and material costs associated with maintaining
the commercial refrigeration equipment (e.g., cleaning heat exchanger coils, checking refrigerant charge
levels, lamp replacement). Estimated from data in RS
Means Facilities Maintenance and Repair Cost
Data.13 Also considered lighting types and configurations for the refrigeration equipment.
Standard-Level Manufacturer
Selling Price Increases.
Markups and Sales Tax .......
Installation Price ...................
Equipment Energy Consumption.
Electricity Prices ...................
Electricity Price Trends ........
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Maintenance Costs ..............
Changes for final rule
Data reflect updated engineering analysis.
Data reflect updated engineering analysis.
Markups updated based on revised data on sales tax
and wholesaler financial data.
No change.
Data reflect updated engineering analysis for each efficiency level.
No change.
Updated to AEO2008.
No change in methodology; however, LED fixture replacement costs reflect updated engineering analysis
costs by equipment class.
13 RS Means Company, Inc., 2006. Means
Costworks 2006: Facility Maintenance & Repair
Cost Data. Kingston, Massachusetts.
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TABLE IV–9—SUMMARY OF INPUTS AND KEY ASSUMPTIONS USED IN THE LCC AND PBP ANALYSES—Continued
Input
NOPR description
Changes for final rule
Repair Costs ........................
Labor and material costs associated with repairing or
replacing components that have failed. Estimated
based on replacement frequencies and costs for key
components.
Age at which the commercial refrigeration equipment is
retired from service. Used an average lifetime of 10
years for large grocery and multi-line retailers and an
average lifetime of 15 years for small grocers and
convenience stores.
Computed by estimating the cost of capital for companies that purchase refrigeration equipment using
business financial data from the Damodaran Online
database.
A rebound effect was not taken into account in the LCC
analysis.
No change in methodology from NOPR. Repair costs
reflect estimates of individual component life and cost
to replace. Repair costs increase with increasing
component costs.
No change.
Equipment Lifetime ..............
Discount Rate ......................
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES2
Rebound Effect ....................
The changes in the input data and the
discussion of the overall approach to the
LCC analysis are provided in chapter 8
of the TSD.
In response to the NOPR, DOE
received comments on two key issues
affecting the LCC analysis: electricity
price forecasts and lighting maintenance
costs. Regarding electricity price
forecasts, ACEEE asked DOE to confirm
whether the Energy Information
Administration (EIA) electricity price
forecasts take into account welldocumented regulatory-based changes
in electricity prices and are not just
based on responses to fuel cost
forecasts. (ACEEE, Public Meeting
Transcript, No. 27 at p. 82) In response,
DOE notes that the EIA electricity price
forecasts are developed through NEMS
modeling and rely on a comprehensive
series of supply- and demand-based
modules integrated to capture the
market dynamics for various energy
sources, including oil, coal, and natural
gas. These models also capture a wide
range of consumption purposes,
including such events as changes in the
price and supplies of fossil fuels,
developments in electricity markets,
likely improvements in technology, and
the impact of economic growth and
various other regulatory impacts that
affect market electricity prices. NEMS is
regularly used to provide analyses to
Congress and DOE. DOE believes that
NEMS does attempt to capture many
known regulatory changes.
The Joint Comment stated that DOE
should use forecasts for electricity
prices other than the Annual Energy
Outlook (AEO), and that electricity price
mitigation effects of the proposed
standard must be documented. (Joint
Comment, No. 34 at p. 6) This comment
addresses both the LCC and NIA
analyses. While DOE considers
AEO2008 reference case forecasts in its
central case fuel price scenario, DOE
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Updated based on data available in the 2008 version of
the Damodaran Web site.
No change.
reviewed LCC and PBP results based on
both the AEO2008 high price and low
price electricity forecasts and discusses
the resulting differences in the TSD.
While the Joint Comment suggests that
DOE consider other forecasts, it does not
point to specific forecast sources or
provide justification for the selection or
weighting of one forecast over the other.
The AEO2008 high price forecast used
in the commercial refrigeration
equipment analysis provides sufficient
insight into probable commercial
electricity price variation based on
existing data and current regulatory
schemes.
DOE considered reporting electricity
price impacts but found that the
uncertainty of price projections,
together with the fairly small impact of
the standards relative to total electricity
demand, makes these price changes
highly uncertain. As a result, they
should not be weighed heavily in the
decision about the standard level. Given
the current complexity of utility
regulation in the United States (with
significant variances among states), it
does not seem appropriate to attempt to
measure impacts on infrastructure costs
and prices where there is likely to be
significant overlap.
DOE develops estimates for repair and
maintenance costs for commercial
refrigeration equipment in the LCC
analysis. In the August 2008 NOPR,
DOE assumed that maintenance costs
are constant and do not vary with time.
AHRI commented that the costs of
maintenance do not remain constant, as
the cost of HFC refrigerants is expected
to increase by 300 percent to 400
percent over the next decade. (AHRI,
No. 33 at p. 6) DOE recognizes that
refrigerant costs may increase. For
remote condensing equipment, leakage
during maintenance occurs throughout
the entire refrigeration system,
including store refrigeration piping and
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remote condensing units, and is
expected to be approximately the same
for all standard levels since little
refrigerant is stored in the evaporator
coils of remote-condensing commercial
refrigeration equipment. The law also
requires that any HFC refrigerant
removed during maintenance must be
captured (recovered), and in
supermarkets it is often reused within
the supermarket chain. 69 FR 11946.
Any loss of refrigerant during
maintenance is essentially the same at
all standard levels analyzed, and
therefore does not affect the results of
DOE’s LCC or NPV analysis. In selfcontained equipment, the refrigeration
system is sealed and little leakage is
expected to occur over the life of the
equipment. Consequently, DOE did not
revise the maintenance costs from the
NOPR to account for future changes in
refrigerant costs.
DOE also included in the
maintenance costs the cost of necessary
lighting component replacements over
the life of the commercial refrigeration
equipment. DOE received comments on
the lighting maintenance costs
assumption for LED lamp fixtures. The
California Utilities Joint Comment cited
evidence from recent assessments, as
well as the physical properties of LEDs,
suggesting that 50,000 hours is likely a
conservative estimate. Fixtures may
actually be replaced less frequently than
the 5.7 years assumed in the NOPR
analysis. (California Utilities Joint
Comment, No. 41 at pp. 10–11) The
comment noted that the LED light
output degrades over time and the
amount of degradation is a function of
the junction temperature of the LED.
Reducing the junction temperature can
result in increased time to failure.
While DOE agrees with this
assessment, the brightness of a
particular LED chip and the
corresponding heat rejection and
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junction temperature are largely a
function of power supplied by the LED
driver circuitry. As such, manufacturers
of LED fixtures can trade off brightness,
total fixture cost, and design life for LED
fixtures designed for commercial
refrigeration equipment applications.
The LED manufacturer equipment
specification sheets that DOE examined
for the final rule provide for a 50,000hour life for the known commercial
refrigeration equipment applications.
Due to the recent availability of LED
fixtures for use with commercial
refrigeration equipment, there are few
instances of installed LED light fixtures
in this equipment exceeding the 50,000hour specification. Therefore, DOE did
not modify its LED fixture replacement
cycle assumptions beyond the
manufacturers’ estimated life.
DOE also received comments on using
a rebuttable presumption payback
period to establish the economic
justification of an energy conservation
standard level. Earthjustice commented
that DOE does not provide any rationale
for why it did not use or does not plan
to use the rebuttable presumption
payback period analysis to set the trial
standard level for these products.
Earthjustice stated that Congress
specifically provided that once the
rebuttable presumption payback period
is satisfied for a trial standard level, no
further economic justification would be
necessary for DOE’s selection of that
TSL as the final standard. (Earthjustice,
Public Meeting Transcript, No. 27 at p.
88) The Joint Comment also stated that
DOE should give greater consideration
to the rebuttable presumption payback
period when selecting an appropriate
standard level, reflecting the intent of
Congress in 42 U.S.C. section
6295(o)(2)(B)(iii) that the highest
standard level with a 3-year payback
constitutes the presumptive lowest
standard level that DOE must adopt.
(Joint Comment, No. 34 at pp. 3–4)
DOE does consider both the rebuttable
presumption payback criteria, as well as
a full analysis including all seven
relevant statutory criteria under 42
U.S.C. 6295(o)(2)(B)(i), when examining
potential standard levels. DOE believes
that the commenters may be
misinterpreting the statutory provision
in question. Earthjustice presents one
possible reading of an ambiguous
provision (i.e., that DOE need not look
beyond the results of the rebuttable
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presumption inquiry), but DOE believes
that such an approach is neither
required nor appropriate, because it
could ask the agency to ignore other
relevant information that would affect
the selection of the most stringent
standard level that meets all applicable
statutory criteria. The commenter’s
interpretation would essentially restrict
DOE from being able to rebut the
findings of the preliminary presumptive
analysis. However, the statute contains
no such restriction, and such an
approach would hinder DOE’s efforts to
base its regulations on the best available
information.
Similarly, DOE believes that the Joint
Comment misreads the statute in calling
for a level that meets the rebuttable
presumption test to serve as a minimum
level when setting the final energy
conservation standard. To do so would
not only eliminate the ‘‘rebuttable’’
aspect of the presumption but would
also lock in place a level that may not
be economically justified based on the
full complement of statutory criteria.
DOE is already obligated under EPCA to
select the most stringent standard level
that meets the applicable statutory
criteria, so there is no need to tie the
same requirement to the rebuttable
presumption.
DOE also received a comment
supporting its selection of commercial
refrigeration equipment lifetimes. For
the NOPR, DOE determined the lifetime
of commercial refrigeration equipment
by consulting industry experts, other
interested parties, and literature on
equipment lifetimes. The Joint
Comment stated that DOE’s assumptions
in the NOPR regarding product life are
reasonable. (Joint Comment, No. 34 at p.
2) Therefore, DOE has maintained the
NOPR assumptions regarding product
life for the final rule.
F. Shipments Analysis
The shipments analysis develops
future shipments for each class of
commercial refrigeration equipment
based on current shipments and
equipment life assumptions, and takes
into account the existing stock and
expected growth of buildings using
commercial refrigeration equipment.
DOE received no comments on the
shipments analysis or the resulting
shipments during the NOPR. Therefore,
DOE used the same shipments model for
the final rule analysis as the NOPR.
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1109
G. National Impact Analysis
The national impact analysis (NIA)
assesses future NES and the national
economic impacts of different efficiency
levels. The analysis measures economic
impacts using the NPV metric (i.e.,
future amounts discounted to the
present) of total commercial customer
costs, and savings expected to result
from new standards at specific
efficiency levels. For the final rule
analysis, DOE used the same
spreadsheet model used in the NOPR to
calculate the energy savings and the
national economic costs and savings
from new standards, but with updates to
specific input data. Unlike the LCC
analysis, the NES spreadsheet does not
use distributions for inputs or outputs.
DOE examined sensitivities by applying
different scenarios. DOE used the NES
spreadsheet to perform calculations of
national energy savings and NPV using
the annual energy consumption and
total installed cost data from the LCC
analysis and estimates of national
shipments for each of the 15 primary
commercial refrigeration equipment
classes. DOE forecasted the energy
savings from each TSL from 2012
through 2042. DOE forecasted the
energy cost savings, equipment costs,
and NPV of benefits for all primary
commercial refrigeration equipment
classes from 2012 through 2062. The
forecasts provided annual and
cumulative values for all four output
parameters.
DOE calculated the NES by
subtracting energy use under a
standards scenario from energy use in a
base case (no new standards) scenario.
Energy use is reduced when a unit of
commercial refrigeration equipment in
the base case efficiency distribution is
replaced by a more efficient piece of
equipment. Energy savings for each
equipment class are the same national
average values as calculated in the LCC
and payback period spreadsheet.
However, these results are normalized
on a per-unit-length basis by equipment
class and applied to the total annual
estimated shipments in terms of line-up
length of all equipment with the class.
Table IV–10 summarizes key inputs to
the NIA analysis and the changes DOE
made in the analysis for the final rule.
Chapter 11 of the TSD provides
additional information about the NIA
spreadsheet.
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TABLE IV–10—SUMMARY OF NATIONAL ENERGY SAVINGS AND NET PRESENT VALUE INPUTS
Input data
Description of NOPR analysis
Shipments ................
Annual shipments from shipments model for 15 equipment classes. Shipments
model based on projected growth in building stock using commercial refrigeration equipment (new stock) and annual replacements to stock based on
an equipment life. Equipment lifetime distribution based on a 10-year average life in large grocery and multi-line retail, and a 15-year average life in
small grocery and convenience stores (chapter 10, Shipments Analysis).
2012 ......................................................................................................................
No change.
Distribution of base case shipments by efficiency level .......................................
No change in methodology to derive
base case shipments by efficiency
level.
No change in methodology to derive
shipments by efficiency level in each
standards case.
No change in methodology. Energy
consumption estimates reflect the
updated final rule engineering analysis.
No change in methodology. Installed
costs reflect the updated final rule
LCC.
No change in methodology. Repair
costs reflect the updated final rule
LCC values.
No change.
Effective Date of
Standard.
Base Case Efficiencies.
Standards Case Efficiencies.
Changes for final rule
Annual Energy Consumption per Linear Foot.
Distribution of shipments by efficiency level for each base case and each
standards case. Annual market shares by efficiency level remain constant
over time for the base case and each standards case.
Annual weighted-average values are a function of energy consumption level,
which are established in the engineering analysis (chapter 5 of the TSD).
Converted to a per linear foot basis.
Total Installed Cost
per Linear Foot.
Annual weighted-average values are a function of energy consumption level
(chapter 8 of the TSD). Converted to a per linear foot basis.
Repair Cost per Linear Foot.
Annual weighted-average values are constant in real dollar terms for each energy consumption level (chapter 8 of the TSD). Converted to a per linear
foot basis.
Annual weighted-average value equals $160 in 2007$ (chapter 8 of the TSD),
plus lighting maintenance cost. Converted to a per linear foot basis.
EIA AEO2007 forecasts (to 2030) and extrapolation for beyond 2030 (chapter
8 of the TSD).
Maintenance Cost
per Linear Foot.
Escalation of Electricity Prices.
Electricity Site-toConversion varies yearly and is generated by DOE/EIA’s NEMS program (a
Source Conversion.
time series conversion factor; includes electric generation, transmission, and
distribution losses) based on AEO2007.
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Discount Rate ...........
Present Year ............
Rebound Effect ........
3 and 7 percent real .............................................................................................
Future costs are discounted to 2008 ....................................................................
A rebound effect (due to changes in shipments resulting from standards) was
not considered in the NIA.
The modifications DOE made to the
NES and NIA analyses for the final rule
primarily reflect updates to the same
data sources used in the NOPR, but not
changes in methodology. In addition,
the underlying input data on equipment
costs and energy savings by TSL are
based on the LCC analysis results as
revised in the final rule.
For the final rule, DOE developed
marginal site-source conversion factors
that relate the national electrical energy
savings at the point of use to the fuel
savings at the power plant. These factors
use the NEMS model and the
examination of the corresponding
energy savings from standards scenarios
considered in DOE’s utility analysis
(chapter 14 of the TSD). The conversion
factors vary over time, due to projected
changes in electricity generation sources
(i.e., the power plant types projected to
provide electricity to the country) and
power plant dispatch scenarios. DOE
revised the stream of conversion factors
based on the final rule utility impacts
analysis and using a version of NEMS
consistent with AEO2008. DOE also
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updated the electricity price forecasts
used in the NIA to reflect forecasts
found in AEO2008 compared to
AEO2007.
DOE did not receive information to
support revising the shipments analysis
or the methodology used in the NIA to
estimate future shipments by efficiency
level. DOE requested input on this
methodology or on additional data to
estimate future shipments. True
commented that because so many
different features and options can
degrade a product’s efficiency, True
cannot afford to test every permutation’s
efficiency. Traditionally, therefore, True
tests the most severe case, which
includes all the options, and makes sure
it can exceed the standard. As a result,
the units shipped out are often more
efficient than the testing would indicate.
(True, Public Meeting Transcript, No. 27
at p. 119) DOE acknowledges this
comment, but did not receive sufficient
detail to address this concern in the
final rule analysis for individual
commercial refrigeration equipment
classes. Because the distribution of
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No change.
EIA AEO2008 forecasts (to 2030) and
extrapolation for beyond 2030 (chapter 8 of the TSD).
Conversion factor varies yearly and is
generated by EIA’s NEMS model. Includes the impact of electric generation, transmission, and distribution
losses based on AEO2008.
No change.
No change
No change.
efficiencies of all TSLs as well as the
baseline would be similarly affected by
some customers removing specific
energy consuming options (e.g., shelf
lighting) from their purchased products,
the impact of this particular issue on the
potential national energy savings of one
TSL over another may be insignificant.
To discount future impacts, DOE used
discount rates of both 7 percent and 3
percent, in accordance with the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB)’s
guidelines (OMB Circular A–4, section
E, Regulatory Analysis (September 17,
2003)). ASAP commented that DOE
leans too heavily on the 7-percent
discount rate, and that OMB has DOE
looking at both the 3-percent and 7percent discount rates. ASAP stated that
DOE should be giving primacy to the
lower discount rate, which is the
societal discount rate—the time value of
the society as a whole. (ASAP, Public
Meeting Transcript, No. 27 at pp. 20–21
and p. 128) PG&E stated that a 3-percent
discount rate is used for the California
Energy Commission workshops on
efficiency, and that it supports the 3-
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percent rate for the Federal rulemaking.
(PG&E, Public Meeting Transcript, No.
27 at p. 131) The Joint Comment stated
that DOE improperly weighs the 7percent discount rate more than the 3percent discount rate. The Joint
Comment noted that DOE should use
the 3-percent discount rate because it is
the required social discount rate and
because the actual weighted average
cost of capital is lower than 7 percent.
(Joint Comment, No. 34 at p. 6)
DOE reports and uses both 3-percent
and 7-percent discount rates in its
analysis of net present value. OMB’s
guidance to Federal agencies for
developing regulatory analysis (OMB
Circular A–4, September 17, 2003) 14
references OMB Circular A–94 15 for the
development of discount rates for
regulatory analysis. OMB Circular A–94
states that, as a default position,
constant-dollar benefit-cost analyses of
proposed investments and regulations
should report net present value and
other outcomes determined using a real
discount rate of 3 percent. The 7-percent
rate is an estimate of the average beforetax rate of return to private capital in the
U.S. economy. It is a broad measure that
reflects the returns to real estate and
small business capital as well as
corporate capital. It approximates the
opportunity cost of capital, and it is the
appropriate discount rate whenever the
main effect of a regulation is to displace
or alter the use of capital in the private
sector. OMB A–94 states that regulatory
analyses should show the sensitivity of
the discounted net present value and
other outcomes to variations in the
discount rate. The importance of these
alternative calculations will depend on
the specific economic characteristics of
the program under analysis. OMB A–4
notes that the effects of regulation do
not always fall exclusively or primarily
on the allocation of capital. When
regulation primarily and directly affects
private consumption (e.g., through
higher consumer prices for goods and
services), a lower discount rate is
appropriate. The alternative most often
used is sometimes called the social rate
of time preference, or the rate at which
society discounts future consumption
flows to their present value. To
represent these cases, OMB
recommends using the rate the average
saver uses to discount future
consumption as the measure of the
social rate of time preference,
approximating this with the real rate of
return on long-term Government debt
14 https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars/
a004/a-4.pdf.
15 https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars/
a094/a094.html.
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(e.g., the yield on Treasury notes minus
the annual rate of change in the
Consumer Price Index), which has
averaged about 3 percent on a pre-tax
basis for the last 30 years. For the
commercial refrigeration equipment
rulemaking in particular, DOE notes that
the purchasers of commercial
refrigeration equipment are indeed
commercial businesses and not
‘‘savers.’’ Regarding the comment that
the average cost of capital calculated for
businesses purchasing commercial
refrigeration equipment was less than 7
percent, DOE notes that the average cost
of capital calculated for the LCC
analysis is the after-tax cost of capital.
OMB A–4 specifically notes that pre-tax
rates of return better measure society’s
gains from investment. This is because
corporate capital, in particular, pays an
additional layer of taxation: The
corporate income tax. This tax requires
corporate capital to earn a higher pre-tax
rate of return in order to provide
investors with similar after-tax rates of
return compared with non-corporate
investments. Based on the guidance
provided in OMB A–4, DOE considers
both 3-percent and 7-percent discount
rates in the NIA analysis.
ASAP stated that discount rates
should not be applied to quads because
a discount rate is a financial instrument
and a quad is a physical quantity.
(ASAP, Public Meeting Transcript, No.
27 at p. 22) DOE understands ASAP’s
concern about discounting of physical
quantities. Unlike economic factors that
are discounted into the future, physical
quantities are not discounted because
they do not change over time. DOE
reports the undiscounted energy savings
in Table VI–31 of today’s final rule.
H. Life-Cycle Cost Sub-Group Analysis
In analyzing the potential impact of
new or amended standards on
commercial customers, DOE evaluates
the impact on identifiable groups (i.e.,
sub-groups) of customers, such as
different types of businesses that may be
disproportionately affected by a
National standard level. For this
rulemaking, DOE identified
independent small grocery and
convenience stores as a commercial
refrigeration equipment customer subgroup that could be disproportionately
affected, and examined the impact of
proposed standards on this group. DOE
determined the impact on this
commercial refrigeration equipment
customer sub-group using the LCC
spreadsheet model. DOE conducted the
LCC and PBP analyses for commercial
refrigeration equipment customers
represented by the subgroup. DOE did
not receive comments on its
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1111
identification of this class of users as the
key sub-group or on the assumptions
applied to those sub-groups. DOE relied
on the same methodology outlined in
the NOPR for the final rule analysis. The
results of DOE’s LCC sub-group analysis
are summarized in section VI.C.2.e and
described in detail in chapter 12 of the
TSD.
I. Manufacturer Impact Analysis
DOE performed a manufacturer
impact analysis (MIA) to estimate the
financial impact of energy conservation
standards on manufacturers of
commercial refrigeration equipment,
and to assess the impact of such
standards on employment and
manufacturing capacity. DOE conducted
the MIA for commercial refrigeration
equipment in three phases. Phase 1,
Industry Profile, consisted of preparing
an industry characterization, including
data on market share, sales volumes and
trends, pricing, employment, and
financial structure. Phase 2, Industry
Cash Flow Analysis, focused on the
industry as a whole. In this phase, DOE
used the GRIM to prepare an industry
cash-flow analysis. Using publicly
available information developed in
Phase 1, DOE adapted the GRIM’s
generic structure to perform an analysis
of commercial refrigeration equipment
energy conservation standards. In Phase
3, Sub-Group Impact Analysis, DOE
conducted interviews with
manufacturers representing the majority
of domestic commercial refrigeration
equipment sales. This group included
large and small manufacturers,
providing a representative cross-section
of the industry. During these interviews,
DOE discussed engineering,
manufacturing, procurement, and
financial topics specific to each
company and obtained each
manufacturer’s view of the industry.
The interviews provided valuable
information DOE used to evaluate the
impacts of an energy conservation
standard on manufacturer cash flows,
manufacturing capacities, and
employment levels.
The GRIM inputs consist of the
commercial refrigeration industry’s cost
structure, shipments, and revenues.
This includes information from many of
the analyses described above, such as
manufacturing costs and selling prices
from the engineering analysis and
shipments forecasts from the NES.
The GRIM uses the manufacturer
production costs in the engineering
analysis to calculate the MSPs for each
equipment class at each TSL. By
multiplying the production costs by
different sets of markups, DOE derives
the MSPs used to calculate industry
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revenues. Following the NOPR, DOE
revised its engineering cost curves to
derive new manufacturer production
costs. DOE used these updated
production costs in the GRIM for the
final rule.
The GRIM estimates manufacturer
revenues based on total-unit-shipment
forecasts and the distribution of these
shipments by efficiency. Changes in the
efficiency mix at each standard level are
a key driver of manufacturer finances.
For the final rule analysis, DOE used the
total shipments and efficiency
distribution found in the final rule NES.
For additional detail on the
manufacturer impact analysis, refer to
chapter 13 of the TSD.
J. Utility Impact Analysis
The utility impact analysis estimates
the effects of reduced energy
consumption due to improved
equipment efficiency on the utility
industry. This analysis compares
forecast results for a case comparable to
the AEO2008 reference case and forecast
results for policy cases incorporating
each of the commercial refrigeration
equipment TSLs.
DOE analyzed the effects of proposed
standards on electric utility industry
generation capacity and fuel
consumption using a variant of EIA’s
NEMS. EIA uses NEMS to produce its
AEO, a widely recognized baseline
energy forecast for the United States.
DOE used a variant known as NEMS–
BT. The NEMS–BT is run similarly to
the AEO2008 NEMS, except that
commercial refrigeration equipment
energy usage is reduced by the amount
of energy (by fuel type) saved due to the
TSLs. DOE obtained the inputs of
national energy savings from the NES
spreadsheet model. In response to the
August 2008 NOPR, DOE did not
receive comments directly on the
methodology used for the utility impact
analysis. DOE revised the final rule
inputs to use the NEMS–BT consistent
with the AEO2008 and to use the NES
impacts developed in the commercial
refrigeration equipment final rule
analysis.
In the utility impact analysis, DOE
reported the changes in installed
capacity and generation by fuel type
that result for each TSL, as well as
changes in end-use electricity sales.
Chapter 14 of the TSD provides details
of the utility analysis methods and
results.
K. Employment Impact Analysis
DOE considers direct and indirect
employment impacts when developing a
standard. In this case, direct
employment impacts are any changes in
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the number of employees for,
commercial refrigeration equipment
manufacturers, their suppliers, and
related service firms. Indirect impacts
are those changes in employment in the
larger economy that occur due to the
shift in expenditures and capital
investment caused by the purchase and
operation of more efficient commercial
refrigeration equipment. In this
rulemaking, the MIA addresses direct
impacts (chapter 13 of the TSD), and the
employment impact analysis addresses
indirect impacts (chapter 15 of the
TSD).
Indirect employment impacts from
commercial refrigeration equipment
standards consist of the net jobs created
or eliminated in the national economy,
other than in the manufacturing sector
being regulated, as a consequence of: (1)
Reduced spending by end users on
electricity (offset to some degree by the
increased spending on maintenance and
repair), (2) reduced spending on new
energy supply by the utility industry, (3)
increased spending on the purchase
price of new commercial refrigeration
equipment, and (4) the effects of those
three factors throughout the economy.
DOE expects the net monetary savings
from standards to be redirected to other
forms of economic activity. DOE also
expects these shifts in spending and
economic activity to affect the demand
for labor.
DOE used the same methodology
described in the August 2008 NOPR to
estimate indirect national employment
impacts using an input/output model of
the U.S. economy, called ImSET (Impact
of Sector Energy Technologies), which
was developed by DOE’s Building
Technologies Program. 73 FR 50072,
50107–108. The ImSET model estimates
changes in employment, industry
output, and wage income in the overall
U.S. economy resulting from changes in
expenditures in various economic
sectors. DOE estimated changes in
expenditures using the NES
spreadsheet. ImSET then estimated the
net national indirect employment
impacts of potential commercial
refrigeration equipment efficiency
standards on employment by sector.
In response to the August 2008 NOPR,
DOE received several comments on the
employment impact analysis. ASAP
commented that the discussion of the
employment benefits resulting from the
net increase in jobs follows a pattern of
DOE trivializing these benefits in the
rulemakings by stating that they are so
small that they would be imperceptible
in national labor statistics and might be
offset by other unanticipated effects on
employment. ASAP stated that it is
important that DOE keep performing the
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employment analysis given the
cumulative impact of possible DOE
rulemakings over the next 4 years.
(ASAP, Public Meeting Transcript, No.
27 at p. 161)
The Joint Comment also stated that
TSL 5 would create more jobs than TSL
4, and that DOE cannot reject the
difference as statistically insignificant
because it must consider the combined
effect of all rulemakings. (Joint
Comment, No. 34 at p. 5) The Joint
Comment further stated that DOE
should consider indirect job creation as
a serious factor weighing in favor of
stronger standards. (Joint Comment, No.
34 at p. 5)
Earthjustice noted that both indirect
and direct employment benefits are
shown to provide positive employment
in the respective employment and MIA
analyses and that DOE should consider
this in the final rule. (Earthjustice,
Public Meeting Transcript, No. 27 at p.
166)
DOE considers the employment
impacts without quantifying the net
economic value of such impacts. DOE
agrees that the indirect employment
analysis indicates that new energy
conservation standards for commercial
refrigeration equipment could increase
the demand for labor in the economy
and result in additional employment, a
net benefit to society that DOE considers
in establishing standards for commercial
refrigeration equipment. Chapter 15 of
the TSD describes and provides results
for the employment impact analysis.
L. Environmental Assessment
DOE has prepared an environmental
assessment (EA) pursuant to the
National Environmental Policy Act and
the requirements under 42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(2)(B)(i)(VI) and 6316(a) to
determine the environmental impacts of
the standards being established in
today’s final rule. Specifically, DOE
estimated the reduction in total
emissions of CO2 using the NEMS–BT
computer model. DOE calculated a
range of estimates for reduction in NOX
emissions and mercury (Hg) emissions
using current power sector emission
rates. However, the EA does not include
the estimated reduction in power sector
impacts of sulfur dioxide (SO2), because
DOE has determined that any such
reduction resulting from an energy
conservation standard would not affect
the overall level of SO2 emissions in the
United States due to the presence of
national caps on SO2 emissions as
addressed below (see chapter 16 of the
TSD).
The NEMS–BT is run similarly to the
AEO2008 NEMS, except the energy use
is reduced by the amount of energy
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saved due to the TSLs. DOE obtained
the inputs of national energy savings
from the NIA spreadsheet model. For
the EA, the output is the forecasted
physical emissions. The net benefit of
the standard is the difference between
emissions estimated by NEMS–BT and
the AEO2008 reference case. The
NEMS–BT tracks CO2 emissions using a
detailed module that provides results
with a broad coverage of all sectors and
inclusion of interactive effects.
The Clean Air Act Amendments of
1990 set an emissions cap on SO2 for all
power generation. Attaining this target,
however, is flexible among generators
and is enforced through emissions
allowances and tradable permits.
Because SO2 emissions allowances have
value, generators will almost certainly
use them, although not necessarily
immediately or in the same year with
and without a standard in place. In
other words, with or without a standard,
total cumulative SO2 emissions will
always be at or near the ceiling, while
there may be some timing differences
between yearly forecasts. Thus, it is
unlikely that there will be an SO2
environmental benefit from electricity
savings as long as there is enforcement
of the emissions ceilings.
Although there may not be an actual
reduction in SO2 emissions from
electricity savings, there still may be an
economic benefit from reduced demand
for SO2 emission allowances. Electricity
savings decrease the generation of SO2
emissions from power production,
which can decrease the need to
purchase or generate SO2 emissions
allowance credits, and decrease the
costs of complying with regulatory caps
on emissions.
Like SO2, future emissions of NOX
and Hg would have been subject to
emissions caps under the Clean Air
Interstate Act (CAIR) and Clean Air
Mercury Rule (CAMR). However, as
discussed in section VI.C.6, a Federal
court has vacated these rules. The
NEMS–BT model used for today’s final
rule assumed that both NOX and Hg
emissions would be subject to CAIR and
CAMR emissions caps. In the case of
NOX emissions, CAIR would have
permanently capped emissions in 28
eastern states and the District of
Columbia. Because the NEMS–BT
modeling assumed NOX emissions
would be subject to CAIR, DOE
established a range of NOX reductions
based on the use of a NOX low and high
emissions rates (in kt of NOX emitted
per terawatt-hours (TWh) of electricity
generated) derived from the AEO2008.
To estimate the reduction in NOX
emissions, DOE multiplied these
emission rates by the reduction in
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electricity generation due to the
standards considered. However, because
the emissions caps specified by CAMR
would have applied to the entire
country, DOE was unable to use NEMS–
BT model to estimate the physical
quantity changes in mercury emissions
due to energy conservation standards.
To estimate mercury emission
reductions due to standards, DOE used
an Hg emission rate (in metric tons of
Hg per energy produced) based on
AEO2008. Because virtually all mercury
emitted from electricity generation is
from coal-fired power plants, DOE based
the emission rate on the metric tons of
mercury emitted per TWh of coalgenerated electricity. To estimate the
reduction in mercury emissions, DOE
multiplied the emission rate by the
reduction in coal-generated electricity
associated with standards considered.
In comments on the August 2008
NOPR, ASAP stated that it was
important for DOE to consider the
economic impact calculations for
carbon, noting that the economic
savings are significant. In addition, until
the CRE and packaged terminal air
conditioner and heat pump (PTAC and
PTHP) NOPRs, ASAP did not see that
economic values for carbon emissions
savings were factored into the analysis
in a way that could affect decision
making. (ASAP, Public Meeting
Transcript, No. 27 at p. 172) On the
other hand, AHRI believes DOE has no
statutory obligation to monetize CO2
benefits. (AHRI, Public Meeting
Transcript, No. 27 at p. 173)
AHRI further commented that if DOE
decides to monetize CO2 benefits, then
it should account for CO2 emissions that
will result from manufacturing more
efficient products. For example, DOE
should consider the CO2 emissions
resulting from additional copper to be
mined and incorporated into the
finished product. (AHRI, Public Meeting
Transcript, No. 27 at p. 173) True also
commented on types of manufacturing
processes that should be considered in
the emissions analysis. True stated that
the most significant impact of
commercial refrigeration equipment on
the environment is from welding agents
and refrigerants. True further explained
with the global warming potentials
(GWPs) of some of these substances at
1,300, 1,500, and 3,800, the impacts are
astronomically greater than other
impacts the industry faces. (True, Public
Meeting Transcript, No. 27 at p. 174)
On the contrary, ASAP emphasized
that the congressional deadline of
December 31, 2008, means that
‘‘paralysis by analysis’’ is not an option
at this point in this rulemaking and that
it is incumbent upon AHRI to
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1113
demonstrate that any proposed analysis
changes would be significant. (ASAP,
Public Meeting Transcript, No. 27 at p.
173) ACEEE commented that for
buildings and the equipment used in
them (not specific for this class of
equipment), the energy use during the
operating life is roughly 85 percent of
the total lifecycle energy. Also, the
incremental energy change from
increased use of a largely recycled
metals stock is likely have a small
impact on this analysis. (ACEEE, Public
Meeting Transcript, No. 27 at p. 173)
Several interested parties provided
comments on the economic value of CO2
used in DOE’s monetization of carbon
emissions for the August 2008 NOPR
and the final rule for PTACs and PTHPs
(73 FR 58772, October 7, 2008). ASAP
stated that the low range for
monetization of carbon emission
reductions should not be zero. (ASAP,
Public Meeting Transcript, No. 27 at p.
23) AHRI stated that DOE should not
speculate on the value of CO2 emissions
because it has no statutory obligation to
do so and that any value DOE used
would be an estimate. There is no
consensus on any single estimate of the
value of CO2 emissions. Therefore, DOE
should not indulge in speculation to
determine a value when it has no
statutory obligation to do so. (AHRI, No.
33 at p. 6)
Earthjustice commented that the
upper and lower bounds of the values
DOE uses for its carbon emissions are
arbitrarily low. (Earthjustice, No. 38 at
pp. 7–14) Specifically, Earthjustice
stated that by using the value of the
social cost of carbon (SCC) estimated in
Dr. Richard Tol’s 2005 meta-analysis,
DOE excluded critical damages and
made optimistic assumptions that bias
the damage cost downwards.
(Earthjustice, No. 38 at p. 8) Earthjustice
noted that Tol released an update of his
2005 meta-analysis in September 2007,
which reports an increase in his peerreviewed mean estimate of SCC from
$14 to $20/ton CO2 and from $43 to $71/
ton carbon.16 Earthjustice also asserted
that the use of Tol’s mean as an upper
bound is inconsistent with sound risk
analysis and distributions of climate
damage functions, leading to systematic
undervaluation of damages.
(Earthjustice, No. 38 at p. 9) Lastly,
Earthjustice noted that Tol’s estimate
relies primarily on estimates that did
not use the currently accepted climate
change discounting procedure of
16 Tol, R.S.J. (2007) The social cost of carbon:
trends, outliers, and catastrophes. Research Unit
Sustainability and Global Change, Working Paper
FNU–144, Hamburg University and Centre for
Marine and Atmospheric Science, Hamburg,
Germany.
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declining discount rate over time, and it
fails to recognize the distinction
between the ways in which scarcity
affects the value of normal goods and
environmental goods. (Earthjustice, No.
38 at p. 11)
AHRI noted that Congress is now
engaged in debating a possible cap and
trade program for the United States. The
size of the allowance cap first set by
such legislation or by implementing
regulations and the pace of reduction of
the emission allowances will largely
determine the unit price or value of CO2
emissions reductions. AHRI stated that
it would be an arbitrary decision on
DOE’s part to rely on valuations
identified in the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) or
valuations used in the European Union
(EU) cap and trade program when the
United States has not yet set an
emissions cap itself. Further, AHRI
stated that DOE should not allow
evaluation of environmental impacts to
negate or render moot what has always
been, and should remain, the core
analysis in appliance standards
rulemakings, i.e., consumer payback
and life-cycle cost analyses. (AHRI, No.
33 at p. 6) NRDC also stated that the cost
of carbon emissions will become an
issue with California adopting a Climate
Program and the Regional Greenhouse
Gas Initiative in the Northeast. (NRDC,
Public Meeting Transcript, No. 27 at p.
105)
Earthjustice’s written comment states
that DOE’s monetization of CO2
emissions should reflect the potential
U.S. legislation that would put a
national cap on CO2 emissions. This
includes examining the effect of the
standard in reducing allowance prices
and the benefit of reduced emissions in
the NPV. This is Earthjustice’s primary
suggested consideration for DOE;
otherwise, DOE should take into
account existing regional CO2 caps
when monetizing CO2. Finally, the most
basic consideration DOE must make,
according to Earthjustice, is to
economically account for the avoided
environmental harm from CO2
emissions. (Earthjustice, No. 38 at pp.
2–6)
The Joint Comment stated that DOE
should incorporate the monetization of
carbon emission reductions in the lifecycle cost analysis and the national
impact analysis. The Joint Comment
further stated that DOE’s exclusion of
carbon monetization in the LCC and
NIA results in a systematic
underestimation of benefits of new
energy conservation standards. (Joint
Comment, No. 34 at p. 6) Earthjustice
stated that DOE does not account for the
economic value of CO2 emissions
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reductions resulting from efficiency
standards in any meaningful way.
Although DOE has begun estimating a
range of values for carbon emissions, it
then ignores these values when
choosing the new standard level.
Earthjustice stated that DOE must
address these issues by (1) accounting
for the value of emissions reductions
resulting from a standard in the
economic analyses, the LCC, and NIA;
and (2) using reasonable assumptions
and sources when determining the value
of carbon emission reductions because
the current sources evaluated are
inadequate. (Earthjustice, No. 38 at p. 1)
Specifically, Earthjustice stated that
DOE should quantify the effect of a CO2
emission cap on energy prices in the
LCC analysis. (Earthjustice, No. 38 at p.
2)
DOE has made several additions to its
monetization of environmental
emissions reductions in today’s rule,
which are discussed in section VI.C.6.
DOE has chosen to continue to report
these benefits separately from the net
benefits of energy savings. Nothing in
EPCA or in the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA) requires that the
economic value of emissions reduction
be incorporated in the net present value
analysis of energy savings. Unlike
energy savings, the economic value of
emissions reduction is not priced in the
marketplace. However, DOE will
consider both values when weighing the
benefits and burdens of standards.
Although this rulemaking does not
affect SO2 emissions, there are markets
for SO2 emissions allowances. The
market clearing price of SO2 emissions
is roughly the marginal cost of meeting
the regulatory cap, not the marginal
value of the cap itself. Further, because
national SO2 emissions are regulated by
a cap and trade system, the need to meet
these caps is already included in the
price of energy or energy savings. With
a cap on SO2, the value of energy
savings already includes the value of
SO2 control for those consumers
experiencing energy savings. The
economic cost savings associated with
SO2 emissions caps is approximately
equal to the change in the price of
traded allowances resulting from energy
savings multiplied by the number of
allowances that would be issued each
year. That calculation is uncertain
because the energy savings for
commercial refrigeration equipment are
so small relative to the entire electricity
generation market that the resulting
emissions savings would have almost no
impact on price formation in the
allowances market. These savings
would most likely be outweighed by
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uncertainties in the marginal costs of
compliance with SO2 emissions caps.
For those emissions currently not
priced (CO2, Hg, and NOX), only a range
of estimated economic values based on
environmental damage studies of
varying quality and applicability is
available. DOE is weighing these values
separately and is not including them in
the NPV analysis.
V. Discussion of Other Comments
Since DOE opened the docket for this
rulemaking, it has received more than
100 comments from a diverse set of
parties, including manufacturers and
their representatives, trade associations,
wholesalers and distributors, energy
conservation advocates, and electric
utilities. Section IV of this preamble
discusses comments DOE received on
the analytic methodologies it used.
Additional comments DOE received in
response to the August 2008 NOPR
addressed the information DOE used in
its analyses, results of and inferences
drawn from the analyses, impacts of
standards, the merits of the different
TSLs and standards options DOE
considered, and other issues affecting
adoption of standards for commercial
refrigeration equipment. DOE addresses
these comments in this section.
A. Information and Assumptions Used
in Analyses
1. Market and Technology Assessment
a. Data Sources
DOE summarized its analysis for
energy consumption in chapter 3 of the
NOPR TSD. Traulsen stated that there
are problems with the use of energy
consumption data reported to
government agencies because of
inaccurate data reporting. Traulsen cited
several problems with U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency’s
(EPA’s) ENERGY STAR database for
self-contained commercial solid-door
food service refrigerators and freezers,
including equipment listed in the
database that does not conform to the
ENERGY STAR specifications. Traulsen
suggested that sources such as these not
be used in the technical analyses
because of the errors they contain.
(Traulsen, No. 25 at p. 1)
The ENERGY STAR requirements for
commercial solid door refrigerators and
freezers cover self-contained
commercial refrigerators, freezers, and
refrigerator-freezers that have solid
doors, which are not covered in this
commercial refrigeration equipment
rulemaking. In terms of equipment
classes, there is no overlap between the
ENERGY STAR program and DOE’s
rulemaking on commercial refrigeration
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equipment, except for commercial icecream freezers. EPA’s commercial icecream freezer equipment class does not
coincide with DOE’s commercial icecream freezer equipment class because
they are defined differently and tested at
different rating temperatures. In
addition, DOE understands that
Traulsen has a large market in the
commercial refrigeration industry for
self-contained commercial refrigerator
and freezers with doors. However, these
equipment classes are not covered in
this rulemaking. Also, DOE did not use
energy consumption databases from
other government agencies such as EPA.
Rather, DOE conducted its own
evaluation of energy consumption data
for existing equipment from major
manufacturers and compiled a
performance database. The primary
source of information for the database
was equipment data sheets that were
publicly available on manufacturers’
Web sites. From these data sheets,
equipment information such as total
refrigeration load, evaporator
temperature, lighting power draw,
defrost power draw, and motor power
draw allowed determination of
calculated daily energy consumption
(CDEC) according to the DOE test
procedure. See chapter 3 of the TSD for
additional information on market
performance data.
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b. Beverage Merchandisers
In response to the NOPR, Coca-Cola
submitted a comment questioning the
market share and shipment data in
DOE’s analysis. Coca-Cola stated that its
own purchases contradict DOE’s figures.
According to Coca-Cola, vertical closed
transparent, self-contained, medium
temperature (VCT.SC.M) equipment
makes up the majority of Coca-Cola’s
purchases. DOE’s exclusion of this class
accounts for the differences between
Coca-Cola’s purchases and the number
of units shipped that DOE reported in
the engineering analysis. (Coca-Cola,
No. 21 at p. 1)
As explained in the July 2007
ANOPR, VCT.SC.M equipment is
currently covered by energy
conservation standards established in
EPCA. 72 FR 41176. Therefore, selfcontained glass-front beverage
merchandisers (beverage coolers), which
are included in the VCT.SC.M
equipment class, are not covered in this
commercial refrigeration equipment
rulemaking. As a result, all the
shipment and market share data
reported in the engineering analysis are
valid for the classes of commercial
refrigeration equipment covered in this
rulemaking.
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2. Engineering Analysis
a. Design Options
In the NOPR, DOE reevaluated the list
of design options remaining after the
ANOPR screening analysis. Based on
public comments, DOE made the
following design option changes in the
NOPR and did not receive any further
comment for the final rule: increasing
insulation thickness as a design option;
revising anti-sweat heater power values
for certain equipment classes with glass
doors; and revising assumptions made
to estimate changes in cost and
efficiency for high-efficiency, singlespeed compressors used in selfcontained equipment. 73 FR 50087.
However, there were certain design
options for which DOE did receive
comments and that warranted changes
for the final rule. Specifically, LED cost
and efficiency assumptions were
updated.
For the NOPR, DOE could only
identify LED luminaires on the market
for use in vertical refrigerated cases with
transparent doors (i.e., the VCT
equipment family). DOE used these LED
luminaires as the basis for LED lighting
for open refrigerated cases, because DOE
could not identify LED luminaires for
use in open refrigerated cases. However,
when DOE reexamined the current state
of LED lighting for the final rule, DOE
identified LED luminaries on the market
for use in open refrigerated cases. DOE
updated the LED lighting prices for
open refrigerated cases using these
newly identified LED luminaires.
For the final rule, DOE also updated
the LED prices for lighting used in the
VCT equipment families using the
actual reduction in the lumen-based
price of LED chips reported in DOE’s
Multi-Year Program Plan between 2007
and 2008. DOE’s 2007 Multi-Year
Program Plan reported that the latest
available OEM device price for LED
chips was $35/kilolumen.17 DOE’s 2008
Multi-Year Program Plan reported that
the latest available OEM device price for
LED chips was $25/kilolumen.18 This
equates to a 29-percent reduction in
lumen-based LED chip costs from 2007–
2008. For the final rule, DOE applied
this 29-percent reduction in lumenbased LED chip costs to the LED lighting
for the VCT equipment families,
representing about a 9-percent reduction
in LED system costs, assuming the costs
of the power supply and LED fixtures
did not change from the values used in
17 U.S. Department of Energy, Solid-State Lighting
Research and Development, Multi-Year Program
Plan FY08–FY13.
18 U.S. Department of Energy, Solid-State Lighting
Research and Development, Multi-Year Program
Plan FY09–FY14.
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the NOPR engineering analysis. For
additional detail regarding LED costs,
see section IV.B.2.a.
In addition to expected price
reductions, DOE received comments on
the unique performance advantages of
LED systems following the NOPR.
Philips stated that LED systems are
virtually maintenance-free. Without
maintenance costs, LED payback
periods amount to roughly half of their
life expectancy. (Philips, No. 29 at
pp. 1–6) Philips also claimed that LED
efficacy (lm/W) is expected to increase.
Increases in efficacy effectively reduce
the operational costs of the system by
allowing for less energy consumption
while maintaining output. (Philips, No.
29 at p. 1)
As mentioned above, for today’s final
rule, DOE reexamined the LED lighting
assumptions that were used in the
NOPR. DOE identified more efficacious
LED lighting options for use in both
vertical refrigerated cases with
transparent doors and open refrigerated
cases than the LED lighting identified in
the NOPR analysis. Based on the new
LED lighting options, DOE updated case
lighting configurations for each
equipment class specific to LED lighting
in the engineering analysis. For more
detail about the updated LED lighting
performance assumptions, see chapter 5
and appendix B of the TSD.
In addition to the life-cycle benefits
afforded by LEDs, the California
Utilities Joint Comment stated that LED
systems have a higher degree of
controllability, which gives the systems
dimming, cold start, and short cycling
capabilities. (California Utilities Joint
Comment, No. 41 at p. 3) ASAP added
that these features allow LED systems to
be turned off in situations in which
fluorescents could not. This equates to
improved energy efficiency for
commercial refrigeration equipment that
uses LED lighting. (ASAP, Public
Meeting Transcript, No. 27 at p. 106)
The enhanced controllability of LED
lighting can offer multiple benefits over
fluorescent lighting. Specifically, the
ability to reduce the operating time of
LED lighting can lead to increased
energy efficiency for commercial
refrigeration equipment. Therefore, in
the July 2007 ANOPR, DOE specifically
requested public comment on using 24
hours as the case lighting operational
hours. 72 FR 41187. In the August 2008
NOPR, based on public comment, DOE
determined that 24 hours was an
adequate assumption for case lighting
operating hours regardless of lighting
type. 73 FR 50095. In addition, the test
procedure DOE adopted for commercial
refrigeration equipment, ANSI/ARI
Standard 1200–2006, is a steady-state
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test procedure, which is unable to
capture significant energy savings due
to dimming controls or motion sensors.
71 FR 71370.
Following the NOPR, some
manufacturers expressed concerns that
implementing LED lighting would
reduce the quality of their equipment.
Specifically, they disagreed with the use
of general white light LEDs to develop
a price specifically for LED lighting
used in commercial refrigeration
equipment. True and Southern Store
Fixtures stated that the grocery store
market will be most affected by the use
of LED lighting because certain food
products, such as meat, dairy, deli, and
produce, have to have a special display
color. (True, Public Meeting Transcript,
No. 27 at p. 111; Southern Store
Fixtures, Public Meeting Transcript, No.
27 at p. 108) Continental Refrigerator
added that in low-temperature
applications, there is degradation in
LED color quality, requiring the
technology to be developed further.
(Continental Refrigerator, No. 27 at
p. 141) Southern Store Fixtures stated
that LEDs used in commercial
refrigeration equipment are more
expensive because additional labor is
required to test and sort the LEDs to
meet the industry’s color quality
requirements. (Southern Store Fixture,
Public Meeting Transcript, No. 27 at p.
108) Hill Phoenix agreed with Southern
Store Fixtures and added that
repeatability and minimizing the LED
output variance also factors into this
costly sorting process (i.e., binning).
(Hill Phoenix, Public Meeting
Transcript, No. 27 at p. 109) PG&E
estimated that this premium will remain
constant independent of any future
price reductions. (PG&E, Public Meeting
Transcript, No. 27 at p. 110) AHRI and
Hill Phoenix suggested that prices for
LED systems used in commercial
refrigeration equipment will not
experience the same price reductions
that the rest of the LED industry will.
Both interested parties agreed that,
because the commercial refrigeration
market for LEDs is small, there will not
be a great demand for high-quality
LEDs, providing little incentive for LED
suppliers to offer low-price, high-quality
LEDs. (AHRI, No. 33 at p. 2 and Hill
Phoenix, No. 32 at p. 2)
DOE acknowledges that a premium
markup is applied to LED chips used in
commercial refrigeration applications
due to the binning process. This highly
selective process requires LED chips to
be chosen by hand to ensure the
consistency in color, temperature and
light quality demanded by commercial
refrigeration equipment customers. As
LED technology advances (e.g., efficacy
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or price), the binning process for quality
remains the same, resulting in a
constant markup on the price of LED
chips used for commercial refrigeration
equipment. DOE accounted for this
premium in the pricing used for the
NOPR analysis. In the update of LED
prices between 2007 and 2008 for the
final rule, DOE maintained the markup
associated with the higher level of
quality needed for LEDs used in
commercial refrigeration equipment.
DOE also received comments on the
relative benefits of using LEDs in lowtemperature cases versus mediumtemperature cases and in closed cases
versus open cases. The California
Utilities Joint Comment stated that LED
luminous output is 10 percent higher at
0 °F than at 25 °F. (California Utilities
Joint Comment, No. 41 at p. 11)
Southern Store Fixtures stated the heat
from the LED fixture could be used to
control condensate on closed case
doors. It suggested using a remote power
module for open cases. (Southern Store
Fixtures, Public Meeting Transcript, No.
27 at p. 98) Hill Phoenix also stated that
it is still a challenge for LED lighting in
open cases to provide the quality and
quantity of light required by the food
marketing industry. (Hill Phoenix, No.
32 at p. 1)
As stated above, DOE was able to
identify for the final rule LED
luminaires currently available on the
market for both open refrigerated cases
and vertical refrigerated cases with
transparent doors. The benefits of using
LEDs vary depending on the type of
commercial refrigerated equipment in
which they are used. However, the
luminaires DOE identified for use in the
final rule analysis were specifically
developed for individual types of
commercial refrigeration equipment,
and the luminaire manufacturers
reported that the performance and
quality of those luminaires were
developed to meet the specific light
output requirements of the commercial
refrigeration equipment manufacturers
that use them. Therefore, although the
LED luminous output may be about 10
percent higher for low-temperature
cases compared to medium-temperature
cases, the luminaires chosen for the
analysis were actual products that
commercial refrigeration equipment
manufacturers specified provide
appropriate lighting levels. Likewise,
the power configuration used in the
analysis for LED fixtures was also based
on actual products used in closed and
open cases. However, DOE did modify
the LED lighting configurations assumed
in the engineering analysis based on
comments received and lighting
manufacturer specification sheets. Most
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notably, for the final rule, DOE doubled
the shelf lighting for open cases
compared to that assumed for the
NOPR. This increase in shelf lighting is
needed to meet the lighting
requirements of open cases due to the
directional nature of LED lighting. See
appendix B for more detail regarding the
lighting configurations assumed in the
engineering analysis.
b. Baseline Models
DOE established baseline
specifications for each equipment class
modeled in the engineering analysis by
reviewing available manufacturer data,
selecting several representative units,
and then aggregating the physical
characteristics of those units. This
process created a unit representative of
commercial refrigeration equipment
currently offered for sale in each
equipment class, with average
characteristics for physical parameters
(e.g., volume, TDA), and minimum
performance of energy-consuming
components (e.g., fans, lighting). In the
NOPR analysis, DOE made several
revisions to the baseline specifications.
These changes include updates to
baseline lighting, TDA calculations, and
baseline energy consumption. Appendix
B of the NOPR TSD explained in detail
the changes made to the baseline design
specifications relative to the ANOPR
analysis. DOE received no comments
specific to these changes, and is
therefore maintaining them for the final
rule.
c. Consideration of Alternative
Refrigerants
The framework document stated that
due to the phaseout of
chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) and
hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs) in
refrigeration equipment, the industry
would likely use HFC refrigerants in
their products. Following the framework
document, AHRI stated that most of the
data it provided to DOE was based on
the use of HFC refrigerants. In the
ANOPR TSD and NOPR, DOE assumed
that HFC refrigerants were already in
wide use in the refrigeration industry,
and therefore used HFC refrigerants as
the basis for the technical analysis
conducted in the rulemaking.
The Joint Comment in response to the
NOPR stated that DOE should consider
alternative primary refrigerants such as
hydrocarbons, ammonia, and CO2 in its
analysis because of their potential
energy benefits, and because of the
current phase-out of CFCs and HCFCs as
refrigerants. The Joint Comment pointed
out that alternative primary refrigerants
are widely used in countries other than
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the United States, principally in Europe.
(Joint Comment, No. 34 at p. 8)
As stated in the ANOPR TSD and
NOPR, DOE based its technical analysis
on the use of HFC refrigerants. A
Federal phaseout of CFC refrigerants has
already occurred, and a Federal
phaseout of HCFC refrigerants is
pending in 2010. Thus, DOE did not
consider CFCs and HCFCs in its
analysis. Likewise, although alternative
refrigerants such as hydrocarbons,
ammonia, and CO2 are used in Europe
and elsewhere in the world, there is no
evidence that they are widely used for
commercial refrigeration applications in
the United States. In addition, current
state and local building codes would not
allow the use of many alternative
refrigerants (Safety Class A3—most
hydrocarbon refrigerants) in remote
condensing equipment covered by this
rulemaking due to flammability
concerns. These codes would also
severely limit the use of ammonia due
to toxicity concerns. Both could be
considered for use with secondary loop
refrigeration systems, but these are not
the subject of this rulemaking.
Hydrocarbon refrigerants could possibly
be used for small self-contained
commercial refrigeration equipment
covered in this rulemaking if they
contain less than 3 pounds of refrigerant
and if they have been certified by
Underwriters Laboratories or another
product certification lab. However, DOE
believes that no such equipment has
been certified for the U.S. market, and
it did not consider these refrigerants as
a viable design option in the
engineering analysis.
The majority of the U.S. commercial
refrigeration industry uses HFC
refrigerants in commercial refrigeration
equipment. Since the analysis should be
based on the refrigerant most widely
used in commercial refrigeration
equipment, it is unnecessary to consider
alternative refrigerants. For these
reasons, DOE has continued to use HFC
refrigerants as the basis for its technical
analysis. DOE used the HFC refrigerant
R–404A for all remote condensing
equipment and HFC refrigerant R–404A
or refrigerant R–134A for all selfcontained equipment.
d. Consideration of NSF 7 Type II
Equipment
On December 8, 2006, DOE published
a final rule in which it adopted ANSI/
ARI Standard 1200–2006 as the DOE
test procedure for commercial
refrigeration equipment. 71 FR at 71340,
71369–70. DOE incorporated the test
procedure into its regulations in 10 CFR
431.63–431.64. The standard also
requires performance tests to be
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conducted according to ANSI/ASHRAE
Standard 72–2005. Following the NOPR,
DOE received comments from Southern
Store Fixtures and Zero Zone stating
that the DOE test procedure is
insufficient because a subset of the
equipment covered in this rulemaking is
designed for and operates under harsher
conditions than the 75.2 °F dry-bulb and
64.4 °F wet-bulb ambient temperature
condition used in the DOE test
procedure.
According to Southern Store Fixtures
and Zero Zone, the hotter, more humid
ambient condition requires additional
energy consumption to power larger
compressors and the anti-condensate
capabilities necessary in this
environment. These conditions make it
more difficult to meet the standards
proposed by this rulemaking. As a
result, both Zero Zone and Southern
Store Fixtures suggested that DOE
should account for the difference
between test procedure ambient
conditions and operating ambient
conditions for this subset of equipment
by making a distinction similar to the
one currently used in the National
Sanitation Foundation Standard 7 (NSF
7) standard. (Zero Zone Public Meeting
Transcript, No. 27 at p. 17 and Southern
Store Fixtures No. 27 at p. 18) Under
NSF 7, equipment intended for use in
more severe environments is designated
as ‘‘Type II’’ equipment and is tested at
80 °F dry-bulb and 68 °F wet-bulb
ambient conditions. NSF ‘‘Type I’’
equipment is tested at the same ambient
conditions as the DOE test procedure,
namely the 75.2 °F dry-bulb and 64.4 °F
wet-bulb temperature ambient
condition.
To address this issue, AHRI suggested
exempting Type II equipment from
coverage or instructing manufacturers of
Type II equipment to apply for waivers.
(AHRI, Public Meeting Transcript, No.
27 at p. 50) If the waiver approach is
pursued, Southern Store Fixtures
suggested using available NSF Type II
testing data to find the relationship
among food temperature, the metric
used in NSF testing, and energy
consumption, the metric used in the
DOE test procedure. This relationship
would allow at least some Type II
equipment to be considered fairly under
this rule and mitigate a spike in waiver
applications. (Southern Store Fixtures,
Public Meeting Transcript, No. 27 at p.
54)
After consideration of these
comments, DOE believes that instituting
a distinction between Type I and Type
II commercial refrigeration equipment,
as defined by NSF 7, is unnecessary in
this rulemaking. The DOE test
procedure, ARI Standard 1200–2006,
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1117
requires that energy consumption
testing for all commercial refrigeration
equipment covered in this rulemaking
be conducted according to ANSI/
ASHRAE Standard 72–2005, which
prescribes specific ambient conditions.
There is no requirement to address the
ambient conditions specified in the NSF
7 standard. The two standards also serve
different purposes. The ANSI/ASHRAE
72–2005 standard measures energy
consumption for a specific ambient
condition, whereas the NSF 7 standard
measures food temperature at a specific
ambient condition for food safety
purposes. Although these test
procedures have different purposes,
including the NSF 7 Type II test
procedure would have a minimal
impact on the energy consumption of
this equipment because the differences
between the ANSI/ASHRAE 72–2005
and NSF 7 Type II ambient test
conditions are marginal. NSF 7 Type II
equipment is defined as a unit intended
for use in an environment in which the
ambient dry-bulb temperature does not
exceed 80 °F. This is at most 5 °F higher
than the 75 °F ambient dry bulb
temperature used in the DOE test
procedure. Therefore, the test procedure
requires all commercial refrigeration
equipment covered under this
rulemaking to be tested for energy
consumption according to the ambient
conditions specified in ANSI/ASHRAE
Standard 72–2005 and will not include
any distinction between Type I and
Type II equipment as defined by NSF 7.
e. Product Class Extension Factors
In the NOPR, DOE developed
multipliers to extend standards from the
15 equipment classes it directly
analyzed to the remaining 23 secondary
equipment classes of commercial
refrigeration equipment it did not
directly analyze. DOE’s approach
involved a matched-pair analysis, which
examined the relationship between
several related pairs of equipment
classes. Chapter 5 of the TSD discusses
the development of the extension
multipliers and the set of focused
matched-pair analyses.
Following the NOPR, Southern Store
Fixtures questioned the extension
multiplier for self-contained equipment
that was based on the analytical results
for open remote condensing equipment.
Southern Store Fixtures believed that
the extension multiplier of 2.51 DOE
developed to correlate remote mediumtemperature equipment without doors to
self-contained medium-temperature
equipment without doors should be
higher to adequately account for the
more severe conditions in which self
contained equipment are typically used,
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but did not offer a recommendation for
the value. (Southern Store Fixtures,
Public Meeting Transcript, No. 27 at p.
37)
The DOE test procedure, ARI
Standard 1200–2006, requires that
energy consumption testing for all
commercial refrigeration equipment
covered in this rulemaking be
conducted according to ANSI/ASHRAE
Standard 72–2005, which prescribes
specific ambient conditions. The
ambient conditions specified by the
DOE test procedure are the same
regardless of the condensing unit
configuration (i.e., remote condensing or
self-contained). In addition, the 2.51
extension multiplier was developed
based on the relationship between the
medium temperature VOP, SVO, and
HZO equipment classes that DOE
directly analyzed. Because neither an
alternative value nor contradicting
analysis was offered, for today’s final
rule, DOE will continue to use the 2.51
and other extension multipliers
developed in the NOPR.
f. TSL Energy Limits
After the NOPR, Hussman submitted
a comment expressing its concern about
the technologies required for equipment
to meet minimum energy consumption
levels for TSL 4. In particular, Hussman
is reluctant to use the no-heat door
design option in humid climates, such
as Houston, Texas. In its experience, noheat doors in humid climates result in
more condensation on store floors.
According to Hussman, wet floors have
led to accidents and costly law suits,
indirectly linking increased energy
efficiency with increased safety risks.
(Hussman, No. 42 at p. 1)
Energy conservation standards for
today’s final rule set a maximum
allowable energy conservation level for
commercial refrigeration equipment.
DOE does not limit the technologies
manufacturers can use to achieve
standards. Manufacturers are free to use
any combination of technologies and
design options to achieve a required
level of energy consumption.
Manufacturers also have the ability to
design equipment for use in specific
regions where certain design options
may cause safety concerns. Certain anticondensate design options consume no
energy and could be used to achieve the
energy consumption levels TSL 4
requires. Anti-condensate films can be
applied to the inner surface of glass
doors to prevent condensation and fog
formation. By installing this film, some
portion (and potentially all) of the glass
and/or door mullion heaters can be
removed and still maintain fog-free
operation. In addition, DOE does not
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have the authority to set regional
standards for commercial refrigeration
equipment, and therefore cannot
customize its analysis to exclude the use
of design options in a specific climate
region. Therefore, in developing the
energy conservation standards for
today’s final rule, DOE did not make
any modifications to accommodate
concerns related to any particular
climate regions.
g. Compressor Selection Oversize Factor
DOE’s energy consumption model
selects the most appropriate compressor
by comparing each compressor’s
capacity to the total refrigeration load in
the case multiplied by the compressor
oversize factor. For the ANOPR analysis,
DOE listed capacity at the standard
rating conditions used in ANSI/ARI
Standard 540–2004.19 However, the
standard rating conditions differed from
the operating conditions used in the
model, resulting in different capacity
values. Because the standard conditions
and modeled conditions differed, the
model typically overestimated the
capacity of the selected compressors. To
compensate, DOE adjusted the
compressor oversize factor to an
unrealistic level (typically level 1) for
the ANOPR model to select the correct
compressor. In the NOPR analysis, DOE
revised the capacity values used to
select self-contained compressors in the
energy consumption model. For the
NOPR, DOE used capacities based on
the same conditions used to calculate
total refrigeration load and revised the
oversize factor (typically 1.4 in the
NOPR model) for all self-contained
equipment classes to maintain the
selection of the correct compressor size.
See chapter 5 of the TSD for more detail.
Following the NOPR, Structural
Concepts commented that the
compressor selection criteria in the
engineering analysis results in the
selection of unreasonable compressors
for the refrigeration load. Specifically,
Structural Concepts stated that the
refrigeration load is 6,990 Btu/h for the
VOP.SC.M equipment class, and the
compressor sizing value is 9,787 Btu/h.
Using the oversize factor value of 1.4,
19 18ANSI/ARI Standard 540–2004: Performance
Rating of Positive Displacement Refrigerant
Compressors and Compressor Units lists standard
rating conditions for hermetic refrigeration
compressors. For medium-temperature equipment,
compressors are rated at 20 °F suction dewpoint,
120 °F discharge dewpoint, 40 °F return gas, and
0 °F subcooling. For low-temperature equipment,
compressors are rated at ¥10 °F suction dewpoint,
120 °F discharge dewpoint, 40 °F return gas, and
0 °F subcooling. For ice-cream-temperature
equipment, compressors are rated at ¥25 °F suction
dewpoint, 105 °F discharge dewpoint, 40 °F return
gas, and 0 °F subcooling.
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the compressor selected in the
engineering analysis has a capacity of
13,219 Btu/h. The selection of an
unrealistically large compressor unfairly
skews the energy efficiency ratio
because the larger compressor has a
higher efficiency rating than the next
smallest compressor that has a rated
capacity closer to the compressor sizing
value. (Structural Concepts, No. 30 at p.
3)
The energy consumption model
selects a compressor assuming that the
rated capacity of the compressor must
be at or above the compressor sizing
value. This prevents the selection of a
compressor that is unable to meet the
refrigeration load. The example
Structural Concepts selected highlights
one of the more extreme cases of how
this model can select a compressor that
is larger than necessary. However,
Structural Concepts did not provide a
recommendation that would result in
the selection of a more appropriate
compressor, or a more appropriate
compressor oversize factor value to use
for all the self-contained equipment
classes. Because manufacturers
previously agreed that the compressor
oversize factor of 1.4 was appropriate to
use for all the self-contained equipment
classes used in the analysis, DOE
maintained its assumptions from the
NOPR.
h. Offset Factors for Self-Contained
Equipment
For the NOPR, DOE developed offset
factors to adjust the energy consumption
calculations to accommodate smaller
equipment for the equipment classes it
directly analyzed. These offset factors
account for the components of the
refrigeration load that remain constant
even when equipment sizes vary (i.e.,
the conduction end effects) and
disproportionately affect smaller cases.
In the equation that describes the
relationship between energy
consumption and the corresponding
TDA or volume metric, the offset factors
are intended to approximate these
constant loads and provide a fixed end
point that corresponds to a zero TDA or
zero volume case. See chapter 5 of the
TSD for further details on the
development of these offset factors for
each equipment class. Following the
NOPR, Structural Concepts requested
that DOE increase the offset factor for
self-contained equipment because
DOE’s analysis selected compressors
that were too large and had
unrealistically high efficiencies.
(Structural Concepts, No. 30 at p. 4)
The compressors suggested by
Structural Concepts for DOE’s model
would, in some cases, be undersized for
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the refrigeration load. As mentioned in
section V.A.2.g, DOE maintained the
methodology used to select compressors
in the energy consumption model.
Because DOE did not receive any
comments on necessary improvements
or data on which its analysis can be
reevaluated, and because the
compressor selections used to develop
the offset factors have not changed, DOE
maintained the offset factors developed
in the NOPR.
i. Self-Contained Condensing Coils
Following the NOPR, Structural
Concepts revealed a discrepancy about
the running temperature for selfcontained equipment using coil
enhancements. (Structural Concepts,
No. 30 at p. 1) Chapter 5, section 5.6.3.7
of the NOPR TSD stated that selfcontained equipment condenser coil
enhancements would allow the
condenser to run at a saturated
condenser temperature (SCT) 10 °F
cooler than a standard coil. However,
the engineering analysis spreadsheet
showed a decrease of 14 °F for this
design option. There was a
typographical error in the NOPR TSD
and the 14 °F decrease in the
engineering analysis is correct. In
chapter 5 of the final rule TSD, DOE
updated its figure to reflect the correct
SCT 14 °F cooler temperature for the
coil enhancements design option for
self-contained equipment.
Structural Concepts also questioned
the validity of using 98 °F as the
baseline SCT in the engineering
analysis. According to Structural
Concepts, this value is not
representative of the current ‘‘off the
shelf’’ self-contained condensing units
available. It believes the baseline SCT
value should be closer to 105 °F or 110
°F. (Structural Concepts, No. 30 at p. 2)
There are condensing coils available
that operate at both higher and lower
SCT than the standard coil used in its
model. This discrepancy exists because
the standard coil used in DOE’s model
is not an actual condensing coil. DOE
reviewed a range of available
manufacturer data, selected several
representative units, and aggregated the
physical characteristics of the selected
units to create a representative unit for
each equipment class. The 98 °F
operating SCT is an average
characteristic. DOE also conducted a
sensitivity analysis to evaluate
Structural Concept’s claim that baseline
SCT was too low. In this sensitivity
analysis in which the SCT was raised to
105 °F, DOE observed only minor
changes in the energy consumption of
the self-contained units. For these
reasons, DOE will continue to use 98 °F
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as the baseline SCT for self-contained
equipment condensers for today’s final
rule.
For the NOPR, DOE used data from
teardowns by Southern California
Edison’s Refrigeration and Thermal Test
Center (RTTC) to model the enhanced
condenser coil used in the engineering
analysis. Based on this information,
DOE considered both minimum and
maximum technology levels for this
design option. For each level, DOE
specified an overall UA-value and a coil
cost. The UA-value is normalized to the
standard coil, and the coil cost is
normalized to the heat removal capacity
of the coil. This approach allowed DOE
to apply the details of coil design across
all self-contained equipment classes. In
consultation with outside experts, DOE
determined that applying the same coil
improvements to different sized coils
would result in similar performance
improvements. See chapter 5 of the TSD
for more detail on the development of
the enhanced condenser coil
specifications.
Following the NOPR, Structural
Concepts stated that DOE overstates the
magnitude of the UA-value increase
achievable with an enhanced condenser
coil. It claimed the enhanced condenser
prototype DOE used as a model for this
design option is too large for use in selfcontained equipment and, because UAvalue primarily depends on surface
area, the use of a smaller, practical
condenser would yield a lower UAvalue. As a result, it requested that DOE
base the UA-value on coils that are
closer in size to the standard coil.
(Structural Concepts, No. 30 at p. 2)
The specifications for the enhanced
coil used in DOE’s analysis are based on
a model developed specifically for use
in a self-contained refrigeration system.
The details of the coil construction are
based on data from teardowns by
Southern California Edison’s
Refrigeration and Thermal Test Center
(RTTC).20 Therefore, DOE is confident
that it modeled an appropriately sized
high efficiency condenser coil. In
addition to increased exterior
dimensions, DOE’s enhanced condenser
coil also uses a higher fin pitch, rifled
tubing, and different tube spacing to
achieve a higher UA-value than the
standard coil. Structural Concepts also
did not provide costs for their suggested
coil model. Because DOE did not
receive additional information or data
that would suggest that the UA-value is
not representative of enhanced
condenser coils, and the data that was
20 Refrigeration and Thermal Test Center.
Personal communication. Southern California
Edison. March 29, 2007.
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1119
provided were incomplete, DOE
maintained its assumptions from the
NOPR for the enhanced condenser coil.
3. Manufacturer Impact Analysis
The Joint Comment stated that DOE
gives exclusive consideration to the
preservation-of-gross-margin (absolute
dollars) scenario. According to the Joint
Comment, relying solely on this
scenario only considers manufacturers’
expectations about the manufacturing
impacts at the proposed standard. (Joint
Comment, No. 7 at p. 2) The Joint
Comment stated the preservation-ofgross-margin-percentage markup
scenario provides a more plausible
representation of impacts on
manufacturers due to new energy
conservation standards. (Joint Comment,
No. 7 at p. 3)
DOE developed two markup
scenarios: The preservation-of-grossmargin-percentage and the preservationof-gross-margin (absolute dollars). DOE
used these scenarios to bound the
potential impacts on the industry value
as a result of new energy conservation
standards and presented its findings in
the August 2008 NOPR for public
comment. 73 FR 50107. The
preservation-of-gross-margin-percentage
markup scenario is a lower bound
estimate on manufacturer impacts
because it assumes that manufacturers
will be able to fully recover all the
increases in production costs due to
energy conservation standards
requirements. The preservation-of-grossmargin (absolute dollars) markup
scenario is an upper bound estimate on
manufacturer impacts because it
assumes that manufacturers will be able
to only partially recover cost increases
(to maintain an absolute dollar gross
margin) due to energy conservation
standards. The markup scenarios DOE
modeled in the GRIM reflect both its
interpretation of qualitative information
learned during manufacturer interviews
and the analysis of limited profit margin
data provided under confidentiality
agreements.
DOE notes the large uncertainty about
the actual impacts on the industry due
to standards. The commercial
refrigeration equipment industry has
never been regulated for energy
efficiency and manufacturers do not
have previous experience on how
energy conservation standards affect
their business. The seven manufacturers
that DOE interviewed for the NOPR
expressed a divergence of views on how
prices would change after standards.
Most manufacturers stated that they
expect profit levels to decrease due to
new energy conservation standards
based on their recent inability to pass on
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increases in material and component
costs to their customers. The portion of
production costs reflected in selling
prices varied significantly from
manufacturer to manufacturer. In
general, companies with lower market
shares face greater challenges in passing
along costs and would suffer larger
margin impacts due to new energy
conservation standards. Manufacturers
with relatively large market shares have
been more successful passing through
costs and they are more confident of
maintaining profit levels over the long
term. Because of the divergence of
experience with cost pass-through and
the implication for prices and
profitability after standards, DOE
considers the full range of potential
impacts bounded by the markup
scenarios and does not consider one
scenario to be more likely.
In response to the NOPR, Earthjustice
noted that the direct employment
benefits are shown to provide positive
employment in the MIA analysis.
Earthjustice stated DOE should consider
these benefits in the final rule.
(Earthjustice, Public Meeting Transcript,
No. 27 at p. 166)
For the MIA, DOE calculated the
direct employment impacts on the
commercial refrigeration industry. DOE
calculated total labor expenditures for
the industry using the production costs
from the engineering analysis, labor
information from U.S. Census Bureau’s
2006 Annual Survey of Manufacturers,
and the total industry shipments from
the NES. DOE translated the total labor
expenditures for the industry into the
total number of domestic jobs using the
domestic share of commercial
refrigeration equipment manufacturing,
the labor rate for the industry, and the
annual hours per worker. DOE
calculated its estimate of the domestic
employment for the base case and each
TSL. The direct employment results
characterized by the MIA represent U.S.
production and non-production workers
that are affected by this rulemaking in
the commercial refrigeration equipment
manufacturing industry.
For the final rule, DOE examined the
impacts of energy conservation
standards on domestic manufacturing
employment levels. The direct
employment impact analysis conducted
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as part of the MIA estimates the number
of domestic workers who are affected by
this rulemaking in the commercial
refrigeration equipment manufacturing
industry, assuming that shipment levels
and product availability remain at
current levels. Because labor costs are
assumed to be a fixed percentage of total
manufacturing production costs, which
increase with more efficient equipment,
the GRIM predicts a gradual increase in
employment after standards. DOE has
considered all employment impacts in
weighing the benefits and the burdens,
including direct (as calculated by the
MIA) and indirect (as calculated by the
employment impact analysis). For
further details on the direct employment
impact analysis, see chapter 13 of the
accompanying TSD.
VI. Analytical Results and Conclusions
A. Trial Standard Levels
DOE selected between four and eight
energy consumption levels for each
commercial refrigeration equipment
class in the LCC analysis. Based on the
results of the analysis, DOE selected five
trial standard levels above the baseline
level for each equipment class for the
NOPR. The range of TSLs selected
includes the most energy efficient
combination of design options with a
positive NPV at the 7-percent discount
rate, and the combination of design
options with the minimum LCC. TSLs
also were selected that filled large gaps
between the baseline and the level with
the minimum LCC.
For the NOPR, DOE developed offset
factors to adjust the energy efficiency
requirements for smaller equipment in
each equipment class analyzed. These
offset factors account for certain
components of the refrigeration load
(such as the conduction end effects) that
remain constant even when equipment
sizes vary. These constant loads affect
smaller cases disproportionately. The
offset factors are intended to
approximate these constant loads and
provide a fixed end point,
corresponding to a zero TDA or zero
volume case, in an equation that
describes the relationship between
energy consumption and the
corresponding TDA or volume metric.
See chapter 5 of the TSD for further
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details on the development of these
offset factors for each equipment class.
For the final rule, DOE preserved the
general methodology it used for the
selection of efficiency levels in the
NOPR in establishing specific efficiency
levels for equipment classes. These
levels are based on the results of the
updated LCC analysis and made up the
TSLs used in the NOPR. Table VI–1
shows the TSL levels DOE selected for
energy use for the equipment classes
analyzed. TSL 5 is the max-tech level
for each equipment class. TSL 4 is the
maximum efficiency level with a
positive NPV at the 7-percent discount
rate, except for VOP.RC.M. In this class,
the minimal difference in energy
efficiency between the minimum lifecycle cost level as determined by the
LCC analysis and the maximum
efficiency level with positive NPV
prompted DOE to select the minimum
life-cycle cost level instead of the
maximum level with positive NPV. TSL
4 is a combination of the efficiency
levels selected for TSL 3 and TSL 5. For
a given equipment class, the efficiency
levels selected for TSL 4 are either
equivalent to those of TSL 3 or TSL 5.
TSL 3 is the efficiency level that
provides the minimum life-cycle cost
determined by the LCC analysis. TSL 2
and TSL 1 represent lower efficiency
levels that fill in the gap between the
current baseline and the levels
determined to have the minimum LCC.
Table VI–1 shows the same TSL levels
in terms of proposed equations that
establish an MDEC limit through a
linear equation of the form:
MDEC = A × TDA + B (for equipment
using TDA as a normalizing metric)
or
MDEC = A × V + B (for equipment using
volume as a normalizing metric)
Coefficients A and B are uniquely
derived for each equipment class based
on the calculated offset factor B (see
chapter 5 of the TSD for offset factors)
and the equation slope A. Equation
slope A would be used to describe the
efficiency requirements for equipment
of different sizes within the same
equipment class. Chapter 9 of the TSD
explains the methodology DOE used for
selecting TSLs and developing the
coefficients shown in Table VI–2.
E:\FR\FM\09JAR2.SGM
09JAR2
1121
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 6 / Friday, January 9, 2009 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE VI–1—TRIAL STANDARD LEVELS FOR ANALYZED EQUIPMENT EXPRESSED IN TERMS OF DAILY ENERGY
CONSUMPTION
Normalization
metric
Equipment class
VOP.RC.M ................
VOP.RC.L .................
VOP.SC.M ................
VCT.RC.M ................
VCT.RC.L .................
VCT.SC.I ...................
VCS.SC.I ..................
SVO.RC.M ................
SVO.SC.M ................
SOC.RC.M ................
HZO.RC.M ................
HZO.RC.L .................
HZO.SC.M ................
HZO.SC.L .................
HCT.SC.I ..................
Normalization
value *
TDA [ft2] ** ............
TDA [ft2] ...............
TDA [ft2] ...............
TDA [ft2] ...............
TDA [ft2] ...............
TDA [ft2] ...............
V [ft3] † ..................
TDA [ft2] ...............
TDA [ft2] ...............
TDA [ft2] ...............
TDA [ft2] ...............
TDA [ft2] ...............
TDA [ft2] ...............
TDA [ft2] ...............
TDA [ft2] ...............
53.30
44.66
14.93
65.00
65.00
26.00
48.00
40.00
12.80
51.00
33.00
46.00
12.00
12.00
5.12
Trial standard levels for equipment analyzed expressed in
terms of energy consumption
(kWh/day)
Test
metric
(kWh/day)
Baseline
CDEC .......................
CDEC .......................
TDEC †† ....................
CDEC .......................
CDEC .......................
TDEC ........................
TDEC ........................
CDEC .......................
TDEC ........................
CDEC .......................
CDEC .......................
CDEC .......................
TDEC ........................
TDEC ........................
TDEC ........................
TSL 1
TSL 2
TSL 3
TSL 4
TSL 5
57.90
133.60
39.60
33.18
69.31
45.63
27.13
43.56
33.11
31.70
19.63
38.38
19.23
38.69
7.25
51.99
118.44
35.95
31.77
65.73
33.35
24.31
39.58
30.66
30.01
17.89
35.30
17.85
36.02
6.37
50.68
113.28
33.38
30.00
46.90
23.39
21.64
38.59
28.87
27.93
15.73
33.41
16.51
33.52
3.70
47.69
112.00
30.70
16.36
39.60
21.17
19.07
36.34
26.74
26.24
14.69
32.97
14.93
30.31
3.53
47.69
108.40
30.70
16.18
39.18
20.81
19.07
36.34
26.74
26.24
14.54
32.97
14.81
30.14
3.32
43.75
108.40
29.33
16.18
39.18
20.81
19.07
33.61
25.74
20.62
14.54
32.97
14.81
30.14
3.32
* This is the assumed baseline size for each equipment class used in DOE’s analyses.
** TDA is total display area of the case.
† V is gross refrigerated volume of the case.
†† TDEC is total daily energy consumption of the case.
TABLE VI–2—TRIAL STANDARD LEVELS EXPRESSED IN TERMS OF EQUATIONS AND COEFFICIENTS FOR EACH PRIMARY
EQUIPMENT CLASS
Equipment
class
VOP.RC.M .....
VOP.RC.L ......
VOP.SC.M ......
VCT.RC.M ......
VCT.RC.L .......
VCT.SC.I ........
VCS.SC.I ........
SVO.RC.M .....
SVO.SC.M ......
SOC.RC.M .....
HZO.RC.M .....
HZO.RC.L ......
HZO.SC.M ......
HZO.SC.L .......
HCT.SC.I ........
Trial standard levels for primary equipment classes analyzed
Test metric
(kWh/day)
CDEC
CDEC
TDEC
CDEC
CDEC
TDEC
TDEC
CDEC
TDEC
CDEC
CDEC
CDEC
TDEC
TDEC
TDEC
............
............
.............
............
............
.............
.............
............
.............
............
............
............
.............
.............
.............
Baseline
1.01
2.84
2.34
0.48
1.03
1.63
0.55
1.01
2.23
0.62
0.51
0.68
1.14
2.63
1.33
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
TSL 1
TDA + 4.07
TDA + 6.85
TDA + 4.71
TDA + 1.95
TDA + 2.61
TDA + 3.29
V + 0.88
TDA + 3.18
TDA + 4.59
TDA + 0.11
TDA + 2.88
TDA + 6.88
TDA + 5.55
TDA + 7.08
TDA + 0.43
In addition to the standards for the 15
primary equipment classes DOE
analyzed, DOE is adopting standards for
the remaining 23 secondary equipment
classes of commercial refrigeration
equipment covered in this rulemaking
that were not directly analyzed in the
engineering analysis due to low annual
shipments (less than 100 units per year).
TSL 2
TSL 3
0.9 × TDA + 4.07
2.5 × TDA + 6.85
2.09 ×TDA + 4.71
0.46 × TDA + 1.95
0.97 × TDA + 2.61
1.16 × TDA + 3.29
0.49 × V + 0.88
0.91 × TDA + 3.18
2.04 × TDA + 4.59
0.59 × TDA + 0.11
0.45 × TDA + 2.88
0.62 × TDA + 6.88
1.03 × TDA + 5.55
2.41 × TDA + 7.08
1.16 × TDA + 0.43
0.87 × TDA + 4.07
2.38 × TDA + 6.85
1.92 ×TDA + 4.71
0.43 × TDA + 1.95
0.68 × TDA + 2.61
0.77 × TDA + 3.29
0.43 × V + 0.88
0.89 × TDA + 3.18
1.9 × TDA + 4.59
0.55 × TDA + 0.11
0.39 × TDA + 2.88
0.58 × TDA + 6.88
0.91 × TDA + 5.55
2.2 × TDA + 7.08
0.64 × TDA + 0.43
0.82 × TDA + 4.07
2.35 × TDA + 6.85
1.74 × TDA + 4.71
0.22 × TDA + 1.95
0.57 × TDA + 2.61
0.69 × TDA + 3.29
0.38 × V + 0.88
0.83 × TDA + 3.18
1.73 × TDA + 4.59
0.51 × TDA + 0.11
0.36 × TDA + 2.88
0.57 × TDA + 6.88
0.78 × TDA + 5.55
1.94 × TDA + 7.08
0.6 × TDA + 0.43
DOE’s approach involved extension
multipliers developed using both the 15
primary equipment classes analyzed
and a set of focused matched-pair
analyses. In addition, standards for
certain primary equipment classes could
be directly applied to other similar
secondary equipment classes. Chapter 5
of the TSD discusses the development of
TSL 4
0.82
2.27
1.74
0.22
0.56
0.67
0.38
0.83
1.73
0.51
0.35
0.57
0.77
1.92
0.56
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
TSL 5
TDA + 4.07
TDA + 6.85
TDA + 4.71
TDA + 1.95
TDA +2.61
TDA + 3.29
V + 0.88
TDA + 3.18
TDA + 4.59
TDA + 0.11
TDA + 2.88
TDA + 6.88
TDA + 5.55
TDA + 7.08
TDA + 0.43
0.74 × TDA + 4.07
2.27 × TDA + 6.85
1.65 × TDA + 4.71
0.22 × TDA + 1.95
0.56 × TDA + 2.61
0.67 × TDA + 3.29
0.38 × V + 0.88
0.76 × TDA + 3.18
1.65 × TDA + 4.59
0.4 × TDA + 0.11
0.35 × TDA + 2.88
0.57 × TDA + 6.88
0.77 × TDA + 5.55
1.92 × TDA + 7.08
0.56 × TDA + 0.43
the extension multipliers and the set of
focused matched-pair analyses.
Using this approach, DOE developed
an additional set of TSLs for these
secondary equipment classes that
corresponds to each of the equations
shown in Table VI–2 at each TSL. Table
VI–3 shows this additional set of
corresponding TSL levels.
TABLE VI–3—TRIAL STANDARD LEVELS EXPRESSED IN TERMS OF EQUATIONS AND COEFFICIENTS FOR EACH SECONDARY
EQUIPMENT CLASS
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES2
Equipment
class
SVO.RC.L ......
VOP.RC.I .......
SVO.RC.I .......
HZO.RC.I .......
VCT.RC.I ........
HCT.RC.M ......
VerDate Nov<24>2008
Trial standard levels for secondary equipment classes analyzed
Test metric
(kWh/day)
CDEC
CDEC
CDEC
CDEC
CDEC
CDEC
............
............
............
............
............
............
Baseline
TSL 1
TSL 2
2.84 × TDA + 6.85
3.6 × TDA + 8.7
3.6 × TDA + 8.7
0.87 × TDA + 8.74
1.2 × TDA + 3.05
0.39 × TDA + 0.13
2.5 × TDA + 6.85
3.17 × TDA + 8.7
3.17 × TDA + 8.7
0.78 × TDA + 8.74
1.14 × TDA + 3.05
0.34 × TDA + 0.13
2.38 × TDA + 6.85
3.03 × TDA + 8.7
3.03 × TDA + 8.7
0.73 × TDA + 8.74
0.8 × TDA + 3.05
0.19 × TDA + 0.13
16:15 Jan 08, 2009
Jkt 217001
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TSL 3
2.35
2.99
2.99
0.72
0.67
0.18
×
×
×
×
×
×
TDA
TDA
TDA
TDA
TDA
TDA
+
+
+
+
+
+
TSL 4
6.85
8.7
8.7
8.74
3.05
0.13
E:\FR\FM\09JAR2.SGM
2.27
2.89
2.89
0.72
0.66
0.16
09JAR2
×
×
×
×
×
×
TDA
TDA
TDA
TDA
TDA
TDA
+
+
+
+
+
+
TSL 5
6.85
8.7
8.7
8.74
3.05
0.13
2.27
2.89
2.89
0.72
0.66
0.16
×
×
×
×
×
×
TDA
TDA
TDA
TDA
TDA
TDA
+
+
+
+
+
+
6.85
8.7
8.7
8.74
3.05
0.13
1122
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 6 / Friday, January 9, 2009 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE VI–3—TRIAL STANDARD LEVELS EXPRESSED IN TERMS OF EQUATIONS AND COEFFICIENTS FOR EACH SECONDARY
EQUIPMENT CLASS—Continued
Equipment
class
HCT.RC.L .......
HCT.RC.I ........
VCS.RC.M ......
VCS.RC.L .......
VCS.RC.I ........
HCS.RC.M .....
HCS.RC.L ......
HCS.RC.I .......
SOC.RC.L ......
SOC.RC.I .......
VOP.SC.L .......
VOP.SC.I ........
SVO.SC.L .......
SVO.SC.I ........
HZO.SC.I ........
SOC.SC.I .......
HCS.SC.I ........
Trial standard levels for secondary equipment classes analyzed
Test metric
(kWh/day)
CDEC
CDEC
CDEC
CDEC
CDEC
CDEC
CDEC
CDEC
CDEC
CDEC
TDEC
TDEC
TDEC
TDEC
TDEC
TDEC
TDEC
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
Baseline
TSL 1
TSL 2
0.81 × TDA + 0.26
0.95 × TDA + 0.31
0.16 × V + 0.26
0.33 × V + 0.54
0.39 × V + 0.63
0.16 × V + 0.26
0.33 × V + 0.54
0.39 × V + 0.63
1.3 × TDA + 0.22
1.52 × TDA + 0.26
5.87 × TDA + 11.82
7.45 × TDA + 15.02
5.59 × TDA + 11.51
7.11 × TDA + 14.63
3.35 × TDA + 9
2.13 × TDA + 0.36
0.55 × V + 0.88
0.71 × TDA + 0.26
0.83 × TDA + 0.31
0.14 × V + 0.26
0.3 × V + 0.54
0.35 × V + 0.63
0.14 × V + 0.26
0.3 × V + 0.54
0.35 × V + 0.63
1.23 × TDA + 0.22
1.44 × TDA + 0.26
5.25 × TDA + 11.82
6.67 × TDA + 15.02
5.11 × TDA + 11.51
6.5 × TDA + 14.63
3.06 × TDA + 9
2.02 × TDA + 0.36
0.49 × V + 0.88
0.39 × TDA + 0.26
0.46 × TDA + 0.31
0.13 × V + 0.26
0.26 × V + 0.54
0.31 × V + 0.63
0.13 × V + 0.26
0.26 × V + 0.54
0.31 × V + 0.63
1.15 × TDA + 0.22
1.34 × TDA + 0.26
4.82 × TDA + 11.82
6.13 × TDA + 15.02
4.76 × TDA + 11.51
6.05 × TDA + 14.63
2.8 × TDA + 9
1.88 × TDA + 0.36
0.43 × V + 0.88
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES2
1. Miscellaneous Equipment
As stated in the August 2008 NOPR,
certain types of equipment meet the
definition of ‘‘commercial refrigeration
equipment’’ (Section 136(a)(3) of EPACT
2005), but do not fall directly into any
of the 38 equipment classes defined in
the market and technology assessment.
One of these types is hybrid cases, in
which two or more compartments are in
different equipment families and are
contained in one cabinet. Another is
refrigerator-freezers, which have two
compartments in the same equipment
family but have different operating
temperatures. Hybrid refrigeratorfreezers, where two or more
compartments are in different
equipment families and have different
operating temperatures, may also exist.
Another is wedge cases, which form
miter transitions (a corner section
between two refrigerated display
merchandisers) between standard
display case lineups. DOE is using
language that will allow manufacturers
to determine appropriate standard levels
for these types of equipment.
An example of a pure hybrid case
(one with two or more compartments in
different equipment families and
operating at the same temperature) is a
unit with one open and one closed
medium-temperature compartment,
such as those seen in coffee shops that
sell baked goods and beverages. These
hybrid cases may be either selfcontained or remote condensing, and
may be cooled by one or more
condensing units. They may also have
one evaporator cooling both
compartments or one evaporator feeding
each compartment separately.
An example of a refrigerator-freezer is
a unit with doors where one
compartment operates at medium
VerDate Nov<24>2008
16:15 Jan 08, 2009
Jkt 217001
TSL 3
0.37
0.43
0.11
0.23
0.27
0.11
0.23
0.27
1.08
1.26
4.37
5.55
4.34
5.52
2.46
1.76
0.38
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
TDA + 0.26
TDA + 0.31
V + 0.26
V + 0.54
V + 0.63
V + 0.26
V + 0.54
V + 0.63
TDA + 0.22
TDA + 0.26
TDA + 11.82
TDA + 15.02
TDA + 11.51
TDA + 14.63
TDA + 9
TDA + 0.36
V + 0.88
temperature and one compartment
operates at low temperature. Remote
condensing commercial refrigeratorfreezers (with and without doors) and
self-contained commercial refrigeratorfreezers without doors may operate in
one of two ways. They may operate as
separate chilled and frozen
compartments with evaporators fed by
two sets of refrigerant lines or two
compressors. Alternatively, they may
operate as separate chilled and frozen
compartments fed by one set of lowtemperature refrigerant lines (with
evaporator pressure regulator (EPR)
valves or similar devices used to raise
the evaporator pressure) or one
compressor.
An example of a hybrid refrigeratorfreezer is a unit with one open
compartment at medium temperature
and one closed compartment at low
temperature. As with pure hybrid cases,
these cases may be either self-contained
or remote condensing, and may be
cooled by one or more condensing units.
In the case of remote condensing
equipment, they may operate as separate
chilled and frozen compartments with
evaporators fed by two sets of refrigerant
lines or two compressors, or they may
operate as separate chilled and frozen
compartments fed by one set of lowtemperature refrigerant lines (with EPR
valves or similar devices used to raise
the evaporator pressure of one
compartment) or one compressor.
In the August 2008 NOPR, DOE
proposed using the following language
for requiring manufacturers to meet
standards for hybrid cases, refrigeratorfreezers, and hybrid refrigeratorfreezers:
• For commercial refrigeration
equipment with two or more
compartments (i.e., hybrid refrigerators,
hybrid freezers, hybrid refrigerator-
PO 00000
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TSL 4
TSL 5
0.34 × TDA + 0.26
0.4 × TDA + 0.31
0.11 × V + 0.26
0.23 × V + 0.54
0.27 × V + 0.63
0.11 × V + 0.26
0.23 × V + 0.54
0.27 × V + 0.63
1.08 × TDA + 0.22
1.26 × TDA + 0.26
4.37 × TDA + 11.82
5.55 × TDA + 15.02
4.34 × TDA + 11.51
5.52 × TDA + 14.63
2.44 × TDA + 9
1.76 × TDA + 0.36
0.38 × V + 0.88
0.34 × TDA + 0.26
0.4 × TDA + 0.31
0.11 × V + 0.26
0.23 × V + 0.54
0.27 × V + 0.63
0.11 × V + 0.26
0.23 × V + 0.54
0.27 × V + 0.63
0.84 × TDA + 0.22
0.99 × TDA + 0.26
4.14 × TDA + 11.82
5.26 × TDA + 15.02
4.15 × TDA + 11.51
5.27 × TDA + 14.63
2.44 × TDA + 9
1.38 × TDA + 0.36
0.38 × V + 0.88
freezers, and non-hybrid refrigerator
freezers), the MDEC for each model
shall be the sum of the MDEC values for
all of its compartments. For each
compartment, measure the TDA or
volume of that compartment, and
determine the appropriate equipment
class based on that compartment’s
equipment family, condensing unit
configuration, and designed operating
temperature. The MDEC limit for each
compartment shall be the calculated
value obtained by entering that
compartment’s TDA or volume into the
standard equation for that
compartment’s equipment class.
Measure the calculated daily energy
consumption (CDEC) or total daily
energy consumption (TDEC) for the
entire case as follows:
Æ For remote condensing
commercial hybrid refrigerators, hybrid
freezers, hybrid refrigerator-freezers,
and non-hybrid refrigerator-freezers,
where two or more independent
condensing units each separately cool
only one compartment, measure the
total refrigeration load of each
compartment separately according to
the ANSI/ASHRAE Standard 72–2005
test procedure. Calculate compressor
energy consumption (CEC) for each
compartment using Table 1 in ARI
Standard 1200–2006 using the saturated
evaporator temperature for that
compartment. The calculated daily
energy consumption (CDEC) for the
entire case shall be the sum of the CEC
for each compartment, fan energy
consumption (FEC), lighting energy
consumption (LEC), anti-condensate
energy consumption (AEC), defrost
energy consumption (DEC), and
condensate evaporator pan energy
consumption (PEC) (as measured in ARI
Standard 1200–2006).
E:\FR\FM\09JAR2.SGM
09JAR2
1123
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 6 / Friday, January 9, 2009 / Rules and Regulations
Æ For remote condensing
commercial hybrid refrigerators, hybrid
freezers, hybrid refrigerator-freezers,
and non-hybrid refrigerator-freezers,
where two or more compartments are
cooled collectively by one condensing
unit, measure the total refrigeration load
of the entire case according to the ANSI/
ASHRAE Standard 72–2005 test
procedure. Calculate a weighted
saturated evaporator temperature for the
entire case by (i) multiplying the
saturated evaporator temperature of
each compartment by the volume of that
compartment (as measured in ARI
Standard 1200–2006), (ii) summing the
resulting values for all compartments,
and (iii) dividing the resulting total by
the total volume of all compartments.
Calculate the CEC for the entire case
using Table 1 in ARI Standard 1200–
2006, using the total refrigeration load
and the weighted average saturated
evaporator temperature. The CDEC for
the entire case shall be the sum of the
CEC, FEC, LEC, AEC, DEC, and PEC.
Æ For self-contained commercial
hybrid refrigerators, hybrid freezers,
hybrid refrigerator-freezers, and nonhybrid refrigerator-freezers, measure the
total daily energy consumption (TDEC)
for the entire case according to the
ANSI/ASHRAE Standard 72–2005 test
procedure.
In response to the NOPR, Traulsen
suggested that DOE address commercial
refrigerator-freezers by summing the
maximum daily energy consumption
values for all of its individual
compartments. (Traulsen, No. 25 at p. 2)
DOE agrees with this suggestion and
notes that it is in alignment with the
proposal in the August 2008 NOPR for
commercial refrigeration equipment
with two or more compartments.
Therefore, DOE is adopting the language
above for hybrid cases, refrigeratorfreezers, and hybrid refrigerator-freezers
in its final rule.
Additionally, DOE is adopting the
following language to address wedge
cases: For remote condensing and selfcontained wedge cases, measure the
CDEC or TDEC according to the ANSI/
ARI 1200–2006 test procedure. The
MDEC for each model shall be the
amount derived by incorporating into
the standard equation for the
appropriate equipment class a value for
the TDA that is the product of: (1) The
vertical height of the air curtain (or glass
in a transparent door), and (2) the
largest overall width of the case when
viewed from the front.
B. Significance of Energy Savings
To estimate the energy savings
through 2042 due to new standards,
DOE compared the energy consumption
of commercial refrigeration equipment
under the base case (no standards) to
energy consumption of this equipment
under each TSL that DOE considered.
Table VI–4 shows DOE’s NES estimates,
which it based on the AEO2008
reference case, for each TSL. Chapter 11
of the TSD describes these estimates in
more detail. DOE reports both
undiscounted and discounted values of
energy savings. Discounted energy
savings represent a policy perspective
where energy savings farther in the
future are less significant than energy
savings closer to the present. Each TSL
considered in this rulemaking resulted
in significant energy savings, and the
amount of savings increased with higher
energy conservation standards. Energy
savings ranged from an estimated 0.168
quads to 1.298 quads for TSLs 1 through
5 (undiscounted).
TABLE VI–4—SUMMARY OF CUMULATIVE NATIONAL ENERGY SAVINGS FOR COMMERCIAL REFRIGERATION EQUIPMENT
(ENERGY SAVINGS FOR UNITS SOLD FROM 2012 TO 2042)
Primary national energy savings (quads)
(sum of all equipment classes)
Trial standard level
Undiscounted
1
2
3
4
5
.............................................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................................
C. Economic Justification
1. Economic Impact on Commercial
Customers
a. Life-Cycle Costs and Payback Period
Commercial customers will be
affected by the standards because they
will experience higher purchase prices
and lower operating costs. Generally,
these impacts are best captured by
changes in life-cycle costs and payback
period. Therefore, DOE calculated the
LCC and PBP for the standard levels
3% Discounted
7% Discounted
0.088
0.339
0.532
0.544
0.683
0.041
0.159
0.250
0.256
0.321
0.168
0.645
1.013
1.035
1.298
considered in this rulemaking. DOE’s
LCC and PBP analyses provided five key
outputs for each TSL, reported in Table
VI–5 through Table VI–19. The first
three outputs are the proportion of
purchases of commercial refrigeration
equipment where the purchase of a
design that complies with the TSL
would create: (1) A net life-cycle cost,
(2) no impact, or (3) a net life-cycle
savings for the consumer. The fourth
output is the average net life-cycle
savings from purchasing a complying
design. The fifth output is the average
PBP for the customer purchasing a
design that complies with the TSL
compared with purchasing baseline
equipment. The PBP is the number of
years it would take for the customer to
recover the increased costs of higherefficiency equipment through energy
savings based on the operating cost
savings from the first year of ownership.
The PBP is an economic benefit-cost
measure that uses benefits and costs
without discounting.
TABLE VI–5—SUMMARY LCC AND PBP RESULTS FOR VOP.RC.M EQUIPMENT CLASS
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES2
Trial standard level
1
Equipment with Net LCC Increase (%) ...................................................
Equipment with No Change in LCC (%) ..................................................
Equipment with Net LCC Savings (%) ....................................................
Mean LCC Savings ($) * ..........................................................................
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TABLE VI–5—SUMMARY LCC AND PBP RESULTS FOR VOP.RC.M EQUIPMENT CLASS—Continued
Trial standard level
1
2
Mean Payback Period (years) .................................................................
* Numbers
0.8
3
4
1.3
2.0
5
2.0
138.1
in parentheses indicate negative savings.
TABLE VI–6—SUMMARY LCC AND PBP RESULTS FOR VOP.RC.L EQUIPMENT CLASS
Trial standard level
1
Equipment with Net LCC Increase (%) ...................................................
Equipment with No Change in LCC (%) ..................................................
Equipment with Net LCC Savings (%) ....................................................
Mean LCC Savings ($) ............................................................................
Mean Payback Period (years) .................................................................
2
0
69
31
3,501
0.7
3
0
52
48
4,500
1.1
4
0
23
77
4,610
1.2
5
0
8
92
3,938
2.8
0
8
92
3,938
2.8
TABLE VI–7—SUMMARY LCC AND PBP RESULTS FOR VOP.SC.M EQUIPMENT CLASS
Trial standard level
1
2
Equipment with Net LCC Increase (%) ...................................................
Equipment with No Change in LCC (%) ..................................................
Equipment with Net LCC Savings (%) ....................................................
Mean LCC Savings ($) ............................................................................
Mean Payback Period (years) .................................................................
0
67
33
842
0.8
3
0
35
65
1,209
1.6
4
0
21
79
1,549
2.4
5
0
21
79
1,549
2.4
69
1
30
(451)
11.2
TABLE VI–8—SUMMARY LCC AND PBP RESULTS FOR VCT.RC.M EQUIPMENT CLASS
Trial standard level
1
2
Equipment with Net LCC Increase (%) ...................................................
Equipment with No Change in LCC (%) ..................................................
Equipment with Net LCC Savings (%) ....................................................
Mean LCC Savings ($) ............................................................................
Mean Payback Period (years) .................................................................
0
80
20
320
0.8
3
0
60
40
657
1.3
4
0
17
83
2,375
3.8
5
0
8
92
2,339
3.9
0
8
92
2,339
3.9
TABLE VI–9—SUMMARY LCC AND PBP RESULTS FOR VCT.RC.L EQUIPMENT CLASS
Trial standard level
1
2
Equipment with Net LCC Increase (%) ...................................................
Equipment with No Change in LCC (%) ..................................................
Equipment with Net LCC Savings (%) ....................................................
Mean LCC Savings ($) ............................................................................
Mean Payback Period (years) .................................................................
0
62
38
762
1.1
3
0
43
57
4,137
2.4
4
0
20
80
5,450
2.5
5
0
10
90
5,419
2.6
0
10
90
5,419
2.6
TABLE VI–10—SUMMARY LCC AND PBP RESULTS FOR VCT.SC.I EQUIPMENT CLASS
Trial standard level
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES2
1
Equipment with Net LCC Increase (%) ...................................................
Equipment with No Change in LCC (%) ..................................................
Equipment with Net LCC Savings (%) ....................................................
Mean LCC Savings ($) ............................................................................
Mean Payback Period (years) .................................................................
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5,217
1.7
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5,217
1.7
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TABLE VI–11—SUMMARY LCC AND PBP RESULTS FOR VCS.SC.I EQUIPMENT CLASS
Trial standard level
1
Equipment with Net LCC Increase (%) ...................................................
Equipment with No Change in LCC (%) ..................................................
Equipment with Net LCC Savings (%) ....................................................
Mean LCC Savings ($) ............................................................................
Mean Payback Period (years) .................................................................
2
0
76
24
704
0.4
3
0
50
50
1,321
0.6
4
0
11
89
1,757
1.3
5
0
11
89
1,757
1.3
0
11
89
1,757
1.3
TABLE VI–12—SUMMARY LCC AND PBP RESULTS FOR SVO.RC.M EQUIPMENT CLASS
Trial standard level
1
Equipment with Net LCC Increase (%) ...................................................
Equipment with No Change in LCC (%) ..................................................
Equipment with Net LCC Savings (%) ....................................................
Mean LCC Savings ($) ............................................................................
Mean Payback Period (years) .................................................................
2
0
65
35
907
0.8
3
0
47
53
896
1.3
4
0
30
70
1,274
1.9
5
0
30
70
1,274
1.9
99
1
0
(2,974)
196.8
TABLE VI–13—SUMMARY LCC AND PBP RESULTS FOR SVO.SC.M EQUIPMENT CLASS
Trial standard level
1
Equipment with Net LCC Increase (%) ...................................................
Equipment with No Change in LCC (%) ..................................................
Equipment with Net LCC Savings (%) ....................................................
Mean LCC Savings ($) ............................................................................
Mean Payback Period (years) .................................................................
2
0
68
32
583
0.6
3
0
36
64
853
1.4
4
0
22
78
1,136
2.3
5
0
22
78
1,136
2.3
69
2
29
(355)
11.5
TABLE VI–14—SUMMARY LCC AND PBP RESULTS FOR SOC.RC.M EQUIPMENT CLASS
Trial standard level
1
Equipment with Net LCC Increase (%) ...................................................
Equipment with No Change in LCC (%) ..................................................
Equipment with Net LCC Savings (%) ....................................................
Mean LCC Savings ($) ............................................................................
Mean Payback Period (years) .................................................................
2
0
82
18
405
0.5
3
4
0
64
36
851
0.8
0
29
71
945
1.7
5
0
29
71
945
1.7
92
3
5
(1,458)
19.4
TABLE VI–15—SUMMARY LCC AND PBP RESULTS FOR HZO.RC.M EQUIPMENT CLASS
Trial standard level
1
Equipment with Net LCC Increase (%) ...................................................
Equipment with No Change in LCC (%) ..................................................
Equipment with Net LCC Savings (%) ....................................................
Mean LCC Savings ($) ............................................................................
Mean Payback Period (years) .................................................................
2
0
80
20
419
0.5
3
0
60
40
887
0.8
4
0
39
61
1,063
1.2
5
0
19
81
1,040
1.6
0
19
81
1,040
1.6
TABLE VI–16—SUMMARY LCC AND PBP RESULTS FOR HZO.RC.L EQUIPMENT CLASS
Trial standard level
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES2
1
Equipment with Net LCC Increase (%) ...................................................
Equipment with No Change in LCC (%) ..................................................
Equipment with Net LCC Savings (%) ....................................................
Mean LCC Savings ($) ............................................................................
Mean Payback Period (years) .................................................................
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TABLE VI–17—SUMMARY LCC AND PBP RESULTS FOR HZO.SC.M EQUIPMENT CLASS
Trial standard level
1
Equipment with Net LCC Increase (%) ...................................................
Equipment with No Change in LCC (%) ..................................................
Equipment with Net LCC Savings (%) ....................................................
Mean LCC Savings ($) ............................................................................
Mean Payback Period (years) .................................................................
2
0
73
27
344
0.4
3
4
0
45
55
615
1.0
0
21
79
861
1.8
5
0
10
90
826
2.3
0
10
90
826
2.3
TABLE VI–18—SUMMARY LCC AND PBP RESULTS FOR HZO.SC.L EQUIPMENT CLASS
Trial standard level
1
Equipment with Net LCC Increase (%) ...................................................
Equipment with No Change in LCC (%) ..................................................
Equipment with Net LCC Savings (%) ....................................................
Mean LCC Savings ($) ............................................................................
Mean Payback Period (years) .................................................................
2
0
73
27
670
0.3
3
0
46
54
1,215
0.8
4
0
21
79
1,784
1.5
5
0
10
90
1,761
1.7
0
10
90
1,761
1.7
TABLE VI–19—SUMMARY LCC AND PBP RESULTS FOR HCT.SC.I EQUIPMENT CLASS
Trial standard level
1
Equipment with Net LCC Increase (%) ...................................................
Equipment with No Change in LCC (%) ..................................................
Equipment with Net LCC Savings (%) ....................................................
Mean LCC Savings ($) ............................................................................
Mean Payback Period (years) .................................................................
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES2
For five equipment classes
(VOP.RC.M, VOP.SC.M, SVO.RC.M,
SVO.SC.M, and SOC.RC.M), TSL 5
resulted in negative LCC savings
compared to the purchase of baseline
equipment. For all other equipment
classes, TSL 5 showed positive LCC
savings. For equipment classes with
lighting, including LED lighting at TSL
5 had a significant impact on the
calculated LCC savings. For equipment
classes without lighting (i.e., VCS.SC.I,
HZO.RC.L, HZO.SC.M, HZO.SC.L, and
HCT.SC.I), the difference in LCC savings
between TSL 3 and TSL 5 was small,
between $0 and $35 less at TSL 5 than
at TSL 3. For VCT.RC.L, VCT.RC.I, and
VCT.SC.I, the difference in LCC savings
between TSL 3 and TSL 5 was small as
well (between $17 and $36 less savings
at TSL 5 than at TSL 3). VOP.RC.L
showed a more significant reduction in
LCC savings at TSL 5 compared to TSL
3 at $672.
2
0
65
35
211
0.6
b. Commercial Customer Sub-Group
Analysis
Using the LCC spreadsheet model,
DOE estimated the impact of the TSLs
on small businesses, a customer subgroup. DOE estimated the LCC and PBP
for small food sales businesses defined
by the Small Business Administration
(SBA) by presuming that most small
business customers could be
represented by the analysis performed
for small grocery and convenience store
owners. DOE further assumed that the
smaller, independent grocery and
convenience store chains may not have
access to national accounts, but would
instead purchase equipment primarily
through distributors and grocery
wholesalers. DOE modified the
distribution channels for remote
condensing and self-contained
equipment to these small businesses as
follows:
• For remote condensing equipment,
15 percent of the sales were assumed to
3
0
47
53
775
1.4
4
0
30
70
797
1.5
5
0
14
86
785
1.9
0
14
86
785
1.9
pass through a manufacturer-todistributor-to-contractor-to-customer
channel, and 85 percent were assumed
to be purchased through a
manufacturer-to-distributor-to-customer
channel.
• For self-contained equipment, 35
percent of sales were assumed to pass
through a manufacturer-to-distributorto-contractor-to-customer channel, and
65 percent were assumed to be
purchased through a manufacturer-todistributor-to-customer channel.
In both cases, the distribution chain
markups were calculated with these
revised shipment weights. Table VI–20
shows the mean LCC savings from
proposed energy conservation standards
for the small business sub-group, and
Table VI–21 shows the mean payback
period (in years) for this sub-group.
More detailed discussion on the LCC
sub-group analysis and results can be
found in chapter 12 of the TSD.
TABLE VI–20—MEAN LIFE-CYCLE COST SAVINGS FOR COMMERCIAL REFRIGERATION EQUIPMENT PURCHASED BY LCC
SUB-GROUP (SMALL BUSINESS) (2007$)*
Equipment class
TSL 1
VOP.RC.M .........................................................................................................
VOP.RC.L ..........................................................................................................
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4,534
TSL 2
TSL 3
1,764
5,882
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6,064
09JAR2
TSL 4
2,443
5,549
TSL 5
(3,463)
5,549
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TABLE VI–20—MEAN LIFE-CYCLE COST SAVINGS FOR COMMERCIAL REFRIGERATION EQUIPMENT PURCHASED BY LCC
SUB-GROUP (SMALL BUSINESS) (2007$)*—Continued
Equipment class
TSL 1
VOP.SC.M ..........................................................................................................
VCT.RC.M ..........................................................................................................
VCT.RC.L ...........................................................................................................
VCT.SC.I ............................................................................................................
VCS.SC.I ............................................................................................................
SVO.RC.M .........................................................................................................
SVO.SC.M ..........................................................................................................
SOC.RC.M .........................................................................................................
HZO.RC.M .........................................................................................................
HZO.RC.L ..........................................................................................................
HZO.SC.M ..........................................................................................................
HZO.SC.L ...........................................................................................................
HCT.SC.I ............................................................................................................
1,094
416
1,001
3,811
902
1,177
752
521
538
875
440
857
272
TSL 2
TSL 3
1,624
868
5,639
6,451
1,703
1,209
1,138
1,106
1,152
1,383
803
1,574
1,022
2,145
3,484
7,454
6,944
2,314
1,738
1,565
1,290
1,397
1,466
1,156
2,364
1,055
TSL 4
2,145
3,458
7,447
6,949
2,314
1,738
1,565
1,290
1,383
1,466
1,129
2,352
1,057
TSL 5
131
3,458
7,447
6,949
2,314
(2,637)
61
(948)
1,383
1,466
1,129
2,352
1,057
* Numbers in parentheses indicate negative savings.
TABLE VI–21—MEAN PAYBACK PERIOD FOR COMMERCIAL REFRIGERATION EQUIPMENT PURCHASED BY LCC SUB-GROUP
(SMALL BUSINESS) (YEARS)
Equipment class
TSL 1
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES2
VOP.RC.M .........................................................................................................
VOP.RC.L ..........................................................................................................
VOP.SC.M ..........................................................................................................
VCT.RC.M ..........................................................................................................
VCT.RC.L ...........................................................................................................
VCT.SC.I ............................................................................................................
VCS.SC.I ............................................................................................................
SVO.RC.M .........................................................................................................
SVO.SC.M ..........................................................................................................
SOC.RC.M .........................................................................................................
HZO.RC.M .........................................................................................................
HZO.RC.L ..........................................................................................................
HZO.SC.M ..........................................................................................................
HZO.SC.L ...........................................................................................................
HCT.SC.I ............................................................................................................
For commercial refrigeration
equipment, the LCC and PBP impacts
for small businesses are similar to those
of all customers as a whole. While the
discount rate for small grocery stores is
higher than the rate for commercial
refrigeration equipment customers as a
whole and equipment prices are higher
due to the higher markups, these small
business customers appear to retain
commercial refrigeration equipment
over longer periods. Also, smaller stores
generally tend to pay higher electric
prices. The average LCC savings for the
small business sub-group is slightly
higher than that calculated for the
average commercial refrigeration
equipment customer, and the average
PBP is slightly shorter than the national
average. DOE concluded that the small
food sales businesses defined by SBA
will not experience economic impacts
significantly different from or more
negative than those impacts on food
sales businesses as a whole.
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0.64
0.70
0.73
1.00
0.90
0.33
0.70
0.55
0.48
0.46
0.93
0.36
0.29
0.58
2. Economic Impact on Manufacturers
DOE determined the economic
impacts of today’s standard on
manufacturers, as described in the
proposed rule. 73 FR 50118–21. For the
final rule, DOE analyzed manufacturer
impacts under two distinct markup
scenarios: (1) The preservation-of-grossmargin-percentage markup scenario,
and (2) the preservation-of-gross-margin
(absolute dollars) markup scenario. 73
FR 50107. Under the first scenario, DOE
applied a single uniform ‘‘gross margin
percentage’’ markup that represents the
current markup for manufacturers in the
commercial refrigeration equipment
industry. This markup scenario implies
that as production costs increase with
efficiency, the absolute dollar markup
will also increase. DOE calculated that
the non-production cost markup—
which consists of selling, general, and
administrative (SG&A) expenses;
research and development (R&D)
expenses; interest; and profit—is 1.32.
This markup is consistent with the one
DOE used in its engineering and GRIM
analyses for the base case.
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TSL 2
TSL 3
1.19
0.99
1.43
1.14
2.17
1.32
0.53
1.19
1.26
0.75
0.72
1.26
0.92
0.71
1.24
1.77
1.10
2.17
3.54
2.32
1.47
1.17
1.73
2.09
1.55
1.13
1.50
1.66
1.35
1.32
TSL 4
1.77
2.53
2.17
3.64
2.42
1.57
1.17
1.73
2.09
1.55
1.47
1.50
2.06
1.55
1.74
TSL 5
51.97
2.53
9.50
3.64
2.42
1.57
1.17
106.71
9.71
15.62
1.47
1.50
2.06
1.55
1.74
The implicit assumption behind the
second scenario is that the industry can
only maintain its gross margin from the
baseline (in absolute dollars) after the
standard. The industry would do so by
passing its increased production costs
on to customers without passing on its
increased R&D and SG&A expenses so
the gross profit per unit is the same in
absolute dollars. DOE implemented this
markup scenario in the GRIM by setting
the production cost markups at each
TSL to yield approximately the same
gross margin in the standards cases in
2012 as they yielded in the base case.
Together, these two markup scenarios
characterize the range of possible
conditions the commercial refrigeration
equipment market will experience as a
result of new energy conservation
standards. See chapter 13 of the TSD for
additional details of the markup
scenarios and analysis. DOE also
examined both of these scenarios for
this final rule.
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a. Industry Cash-Flow Analysis Results
Using two different markup scenarios,
73 FR 50107, 50118–20, DOE estimated
the impact of new standards for
commercial refrigeration equipment on
the INPV of the commercial refrigeration
equipment industry. The impact
consists of the difference between INPV
in the base case and INPV in the
standards case. INPV is the primary
metric used in the MIA, and represents
one measure of the fair value of the
industry in today’s dollars. DOE
calculated the INPV by summing all of
the net cash flows, discounted at the
commercial refrigeration equipment
industry’s cost of capital or discount
rate.
Table VI–22 and Table VI–23 show
the changes in INPV that DOE estimates
would result from the TSLs DOE
considered for this final rule. The tables
also present the equipment conversion
expenses and capital investments that
the industry would incur at each TSL.
Product conversion expenses include
engineering, prototyping, testing, and
marketing expenses incurred by a
manufacturer as it prepares to comply
with a standard. Capital investments are
the one-time outlays for tooling and
plant changes required for the industry
to comply (i.e., conversion capital
expenditures).
TABLE VI–22—MANUFACTURER IMPACT ANALYSIS RESULTS, INCLUDING INPV ESTIMATES, FOR COMMERCIAL
REFRIGERATION EQUIPMENT UNDER THE PRESERVATION OF GROSS MARGIN PERCENTAGE MARKUP SCENARIO
[Preservation of gross margin percentage markup scenario with a rollup shipment scenario]
Base
case
Units
INPV ................................................................
Change in INPV * ............................................
New Energy Conservation Standards Equipment Conversion Expenses.
New Energy Conservation Standards Capital
Investments.
Total Investment Required ..............................
Trial standard level
1
2
3
4
5
2007$ millions ............
2007$ millions ............
(%) ..............................
2007$ millions ............
540
................
................
................
540
0
0.02
0.5
548
8
1.42
2.8
530
(11)
1.95
20.6
501
(39)
(7.29)
40.4
560
20
3.73
51.6
2007$ millions ............
................
0.8
5.0
36.3
71.2
90.8
2007$ millions ............
................
1.3
7.8
57.0
111.6
142.4
* Values in Table VI–22 may not appear to sum due to rounding.
TABLE VI–23—MANUFACTURER IMPACT ANALYSIS RESULTS, INCLUDING INPV ESTIMATES, FOR COMMERCIAL
REFRIGERATION EQUIPMENT UNDER THE PRESERVATION OF GROSS MARGIN (ABSOLUTE DOLLARS) MARKUP SCENARIO
[Preservation of gross margin absolute dollars markup scenario with a rollup shipment scenario]
Base
case
Units
INPV ................................................................
Change in INPV * ............................................
New Energy Conservation Standards Equipment Conversion Expenses.
New Energy Conservation Standards Capital
Investments.
Total Investment Required ..............................
Trial standard level
1
2
3
4
5
2007$ millions ............
2007$ millions ............
(%) ..............................
2007$ millions ............
540
................
................
................
533
(7)
(1.27)
0.5
502
(39)
(7.16)
2.8
442
(99)
(18.26)
20.6
392
(148)
(27.35)
40.4
200
(340)
(63.01)
51.6
2007$ millions ............
................
0.8
5.0
36.3
71.2
90.8
2007$ millions ............
................
1.3
7.8
57.0
111.6
142.4
* Values in Table VI–23 may not appear to sum due to rounding.
The August 2008 NOPR discusses the
estimated impact of new commercial
refrigeration equipment standards on
INPV for each equipment class. 73 FR
50118–20. See chapter 13 of the TSD for
details.
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b. Cumulative Regulatory Burden
DOE’s assesses manufacturer burden
through the cumulative impact of
multiple DOE standards and other
regulatory actions that affect
manufacturers of the same covered
equipment and other equipment
produced by the same manufacturers or
their parent companies. 73 FR 50120.
For the August 2008 NOPR, DOE listed
the EPA-mandated phaseout of HCFCs
as refrigerants and blowing agents, and
energy conservation standards for
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residential central air conditioners and
heat pumps and room air conditioners
as examples of other Federal regulations
that could affect manufacturers of
commercial refrigeration equipment. 73
FR 50120.
Following the August 2008 NOPR,
public comments made DOE aware that
commercial refrigeration equipment
manufacturers must test equipment
using the NSF 7 test procedure in
addition to the DOE test procedure. As
mentioned previously, NSF 7 measures
product temperature for food safety
requirements, while the DOE test
procedure measures energy
consumption for energy conservation
standards. Although NSF 7 is not a
Federal regulation, the commercial
refrigeration equipment industry in
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
general already tests its equipment
using this procedure to meet food safety
requirements.
For this final rule, DOE also identified
the other DOE regulations commercial
refrigeration equipment manufacturers
are facing for other equipment. DOE
identified several regulations that go
into effect 3 years before and after the
effective date of the new energy
conservation standards for commercial
refrigeration equipment. DOE recognizes
that each regulation can significantly
affect manufacturers’ financial
operations. Multiple regulations
affecting the same manufacturer can
quickly reduce manufacturers’ profits
and possibly cause an exit from the
market.
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DOE requested information about the
cumulative regulatory burden during
manufacturer interviews. Manufacturers
indicated that they had already begun
using other non-HCFC refrigerants and
blowing agents. Manufacturers did not
indicate that the DOE regulations on
residential central air conditioners and
heat pumps or room air conditioners
were a great concern. DOE sought
comment on these and other potential
regulations affecting manufacturers for
the final rule. From its own research,
DOE learned that manufacturers of
commercial refrigeration equipment or
their parent companies could also be
affected by rulemakings on PTACs and
PTHPs, room air conditioners,
residential furnaces, and walk-in
freezers and coolers. DOE identified the
costs of additional regulations when
these estimates were available from
other DOE rulemakings. For example,
two commercial refrigeration equipment
manufacturers (or their parent
companies) also manufacture PTACs
and PTHPs. DOE estimated that in the
PTAC and PTHP industry,
manufacturers may incur an estimated
total conversion expense of $17.3
million (2007$). However, DOE has
limited data on the importance of these
other regulated products for
manufacturers of commercial
refrigeration equipment. Differences in
market shares and manufacturing
processes of other regulated products for
each manufacturer could cause varying
degrees of burdens on these
manufacturers. See chapter 13 of the
TSD for additional information
regarding the cumulative regulatory
burden analysis.
c. Impacts on Employment
As discussed in the August 2008
NOPR, DOE expects that employment
by commercial refrigeration equipment
manufacturers would increase under all
of the TSLs considered for today’s rule.
However, this does not take into
account any relocation of domestic jobs
to countries with lower labor costs that
might be influenced by the level of
investment required by new standards.
73 FR 50120–21. Table VI–24 shows the
direct employment impacts at each TSL.
Further support for this conclusion is
set forth in chapter 13 of the TSD.
TABLE VI–24—COMMERCIAL REFRIGERATION EQUIPMENT ESTIMATED EMPLOYMENT IMPACTS IN 2012
Base
case
Trial standard level
Total Number of Domestic Production Employees in 2012 ................................
Change in Total Number of Domestic Production Employees in 2012 Due to
Standards * .......................................................................................................
Total Number of Domestic Non-Production Employees in 2012 * ......................
Total Number of Domestic Employees in 2012 * .................................................
TSL 1
TSL 2
TSL 3
TSL 4
TSL 5
2,199
2,205
2,291
2,371
2,396
2,978
..............
681
2,880
6
683
2,888
92
709
3,000
172
734
3,105
197
742
3,137
779
922
3,900
* Figures do not take into account any relocation of domestic jobs to countries with lower labor costs that might be influenced by the level of investment required by new standards.
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d. Impacts on Manufacturing Capacity
According to the majority of
commercial refrigeration equipment
manufacturers, new energy conservation
standards will not significantly affect
manufacturers’ production capacity.
Any necessary redesign of commercial
refrigeration equipment will not change
the fundamental assembly of the
equipment. However, manufacturers
anticipate some minor changes to
tooling. Thus, manufacturers will be
able to maintain manufacturing capacity
levels and continue to meet market
demand under new energy conservation
standards.
e. Impacts on Manufacturers That Are
Small Businesses
As discussed in the August 2008
NOPR, DOE expects today’s standard to
have little or no differential impact on
small manufacturers of commercial
refrigeration equipment. 73 FR at 50121,
50130–31. DOE found that small
manufacturers generally have the same
concerns as large manufacturers
regarding energy conservation
standards. DOE also found no
significant differences in the R&D
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emphasis or marketing strategies
between small and large manufacturers.
Therefore, DOE believes the GRIM
analysis, which models each equipment
class separately and aggregates the
results to produce an industry-wide
impact, is representative of the small
manufacturers that would be affected by
standards. The impacts on small
manufacturers are discussed further in
section VII.B of this preamble (‘‘Review
Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act’’).
3. National Net Present Value and Net
National Employment
The NPV analysis estimates the
cumulative benefits or costs to the
Nation that would result from particular
standard levels. While the NES analysis
estimates the energy savings from each
standard level DOE considers, relative
to the base case, the NPV analysis
estimates the national economic impacts
of each level relative to the base case.
Table VI–25 provides an overview of the
NPV results for each TSL considered for
this final rule, using both a 7-percent
and a 3-percent real discount rate.
Table VI–25 shows the estimated
cumulative NPV for commercial
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refrigeration equipment resulting from
the sum of the NPV calculated for each
of the 15 primary equipment classes
analyzed. Table VI–25 assumes the
AEO2008 reference case forecast for
electricity prices. At a 7-percent
discount rate, TSLs 1–4 show positive
cumulative NPVs. The highest NPV is
provided by TSL 3 at $1.45 billion. TSL
4 provided $1.41 billion, close to that of
TSL 3. TSL 5 showed a negative NPV at
¥ $2.59 billion, the result of negative
NPV observed in five equipment classes
(VOP.RC.M, VOP.SC.M, SVO.RC.M,
SVO.SC.M, and SOC.RC.M).
At a 3-percent discount rate, the
picture is similar across the equipment
classes. TSL 5 showed a negative NPV
at ¥ $3.79 billion, whereas the highest
NPV was provided at TSL 3 (i.e., $3.97
billion). TSL 4 provided a near
equivalent NPV at $3.93 billion. TSL 5
provided a NPV of ¥ $3.79 billion
dollars. Five equipment classes
(VOP.RC.M, VOP.SC.M, SVO.RC.M,
SVO.SC.M, and SOC.RC.M) were
determined to have negative NPVs at a
3-percent discount rate at TSL 5. See
TSD chapter 11 for more detailed NPV
results.
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TABLE VI–25—OVERVIEW OF NATIONAL NET PRESENT VALUE RESULTS
NPV (billion 2007$)
Trial standard level
7% Discount rate
1
2
3
4
5
...............................................................................................................................................................
...............................................................................................................................................................
...............................................................................................................................................................
...............................................................................................................................................................
...............................................................................................................................................................
DOE also estimated the national
employment impacts that would result
from each TSL. As discussed in the
August 2008 NOPR, 73 FR 50107–08,
50122–23, DOE expects the net
monetary savings from standards to be
redirected to other forms of economic
activity. DOE also expects these shifts in
spending and economic activity to affect
the demand for labor. As shown in
Table VI–26, DOE estimates net indirect
employment impacts—those changes of
employment in the larger economy
(other than in the manufacturing sector
being regulated)—from commercial
refrigeration equipment energy
3% Discount rate
0.33
0.98
1.45
1.41
(2.59)
0.83
2.60
3.97
3.93
(3.79)
conservation standards to be positive
but very small relative to total national
employment. These impacts might be
offset by other, unanticipated effects on
employment. For details on the
employment impact analysis methods
and results, see TSD chapter 15.
TABLE VI–26—NET NATIONAL CHANGE IN INDIRECT EMPLOYMENT, THOUSANDS OF JOBS IN 2042
Net national change in jobs
Trial standard level
2012
1 ...............................................................................................................................................................
2 ...............................................................................................................................................................
3 ...............................................................................................................................................................
4 ...............................................................................................................................................................
5 ...............................................................................................................................................................
Maximum Job Impact ..............................................................................................................................
4. Impact on Utility or Performance of
Equipment
As indicated in section V.B.4 of the
August 2008 NOPR, the new standards
DOE is adopting today will not lessen
the utility or performance of any
commercial refrigeration equipment. 73
FR 50123.
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5. Impact of Any Lessening of
Competition
As discussed in the August 2008
NOPR, 73 FR 50079, 50123, and in
section III.D.1.e of this preamble, DOE
considers any lessening of competition
likely to result from standards. The
Attorney General determines the
impact, if any, of any lessening of
competition.
DOJ concluded that the commercial
refrigeration equipment standards
contained in the proposed rule would
not adversely affect competition. In
reaching this conclusion, DOJ noted that
the proposed standards took into
account comments from commercial
refrigeration equipment manufacturers,
ASHRAE, ACEEE, and electric utilities.
DOJ noted further that all key
components are available for purchase
by any manufacturer; therefore, no
manufacturer has a technological
advantage in meeting the proposed
standards. Finally, DOJ noted that DOE
found no significant differences
between the concerns of large and small
manufacturers, and DOJ found no
evidence that certain manufacturers
would be placed at a competitive
disadvantage to other manufacturers.
6. Need of the Nation To Conserve
Energy
When economically justified, an
improvement in the energy efficiency of
commercial refrigeration equipment is
likely to improve the security of the
Nation by reducing overall energy
demand, thus reducing the Nation’s
reliance on foreign sources of energy.
Reduced demand is also likely to
improve the reliability of the electricity
0
(6)
(15)
(18)
(40)
(40)
2022
2032
202
1,056
1,591
1,658
1,856
1,856
289
1,482
2,238
2,337
2,645
2,645
2042
332
1,699
2,559
2,670
3,011
3,011
system, particularly during peak-load
periods. As a measure of this reduced
demand, DOE expects the new
standards covered under this
rulemaking to eliminate the need for the
construction of approximately 121
megawatts to 2,989 megawatts of new
power by 2042.
Enhanced energy efficiency also
produces environmental benefits. The
expected energy savings from new
standards for the equipment covered by
this rulemaking will reduce the
emissions of air pollutants and
greenhouse gases associated with
electricity production. Table VI–27
provides DOE’s estimate of cumulative
CO2, NOX, and Hg emissions reductions
that would result from the TSLs
considered in this rulemaking. The
expected energy savings from new
standards for commercial refrigeration
equipment may also reduce the cost of
maintaining nationwide emissions
standards and constraints.
TABLE VI–27—SUMMARY OF EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS FOR COMMERCIAL REFRIGERATION EQUIPMENT (CUMULATIVE
REDUCTIONS FOR EQUIPMENT SOLD FROM 2012 TO 2042)
Trial standard levels ††
TSL 1
CO2 (Mt *) .................
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TSL 2
TSL 3
TSL 4
8.5 .............................
32.8 ...........................
50.7 ...........................
52.6 ...........................
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66.0.
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TABLE VI–27—SUMMARY OF EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS FOR COMMERCIAL REFRIGERATION EQUIPMENT (CUMULATIVE
REDUCTIONS FOR EQUIPMENT SOLD FROM 2012 TO 2042)—Continued
Trial standard levels ††
TSL 1
NOX (kt **) .................
Hg (t †) ......................
TSL 2
TSL 3
TSL 4
0.59 to 14.58 .............
0 to 0.224 ..................
2.27 to 56.04 .............
0 to 0.86 ....................
3.51 to 86.77 .............
0 to 1.332 ..................
3.64 to 89.97 .............
0 to 1.381 ..................
TSL 5
4.56 to 112.84.
0 to 1.732.
* Mt = million metric tons.
** kt = thousand tons.
† t = tons.
†† Negative values indicate emission increases. Detail may not appear to sum to total due to rounding.
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The estimated cumulative CO2, NOX,
and Hg emissions reductions for the
new energy conservation standards
range up to 66 Mt for CO2, 1.56 to
112.84 kt for NOX, and 0 to 1.732 t for
Hg for commercial refrigeration
equipment from 2012 to 2042. In the EA
(chapter 16 of the TSD), DOE reports
estimated annual changes in CO2, NOX,
and Hg emissions attributable to each
TSL. As discussed in section IV.L of this
final rule, DOE does not report SO2
emissions reduction from power plants
because reductions from an energy
conservation standard would not affect
the overall level of SO2 emissions in the
United States due to emissions caps for
SO2.
The NEMS–BT modeling assumed
that NOX would be subject to CAIR,
issued by the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency on March 10, 2005.21
70 FR 25162 (May 12, 2005). On July 11,
2008, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia Circuit (DC Circuit)
issued its decision in North Carolina v.
Environmental Protection Agency,22 in
which the court vacated the CAIR. 531
F.3d 896 (DC Cir. 2008). If left in place,
CAIR would have permanently capped
emissions of NOX in 28 eastern States
and the District of Columbia. As with
the SO2 emissions cap, a cap on NOX
emissions would have meant that
energy conservation standards are not
likely to have a physical effect on NOX
emissions in states covered by the CAIR
caps. While the caps would have meant
that physical emissions reductions in
those States would not have resulted
from the energy conservation standards
that DOE is establishing today, the
standards might have produced an
environmental-related economic impact
in the form of lower prices for emissions
21 On December 23, 2008, the DC Circuit decided
to allow CAIR to remain in effect until it is replaced
by a rule consistent with the court’s earlier opinion.
North Carolina v. EPA, No. 05–1244, 2008 WL
5335481 (DC Cir. Dec. 23, 2008). Neither the July
11, 2008, nor the December 23, 2008, decisions of
the DC Circuit change the standard-setting
conclusions reached in this rule. See https://
www.epa.gov/cleanairinterstaterule.
22 Case No. 05–1244, 2008 WL 2698180 at *1 (DC
Cir. July 11, 2008).
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allowance credits, if large enough. DOE
notes that the estimated total reduction
in NOX emissions, including projected
emissions or corresponding allowance
credits in States covered by the CAIR
cap, was insignificant and too small to
affect allowance prices for NOX under
CAIR.
Even though the DC Circuit vacated
CAIR, DOE notes that the DC Circuit left
intact EPA’s 1998 NOX SIP Call rule,
which capped seasonal (summer) NOX
emissions from electric generating units
and other sources in 23 jurisdictions,
and gave those jurisdictions the option
to participate in a cap and trade
program. 63 FR 57356, 57359 (Oct. 27,
1998).23 The SIP Call rule may provide
a similar, although less extensive,
regional cap and may limit actual
reduction in NOX emissions from
revised standards occurring in states
participating in the SIP Call rule.
However, the possibility that the SIP
Call rule may have the same effect as
CAIR is highly uncertain. Therefore,
DOE established a range of NOX
reductions due to the standards being
established in today’s final rule. DOE’s
low estimate was based on the emission
rate of the cleanest new natural gas
combined-cycle power plant available
23 In the NO SIP Call rule, EPA found that
X
sources in the District of Columbia and 22
‘‘upwind’’ states were emitting NOX (an ozone
precursor) at levels that significantly contributed to
‘‘downwind’’ states not attaining the ozone NAAQS
or at levels that interfered with states in attainment
maintaining the ozone NAAQS. To ensure that
downwind states attain or continue to attain the
ozone NAAQS, EPA established a region-wide cap
for NOX emissions from certain large combustion
sources and set a NOX emissions budget for each
State. Unlike the cap that CAIR would have
established, the NOX SIP Call Rule’s cap only
constrains seasonal (summertime) emissions. To
comply with the NOX SIP Call Rule, states could
elect to participate in the NOX Budget Trading
Program. Under this program, each emission source
is required to have one allowance for each ton of
NOX emitted during the ozone season. States have
flexibility in how they allocate allowances through
their State Implementation Plans, but states must
remain within the EPA-established budget.
Emission sources are allowed to buy, sell, and bank
NOX allowances as appropriate. On April 16, 2008,
EPA determined that Georgia is no longer subject
to the NOX SIP Call rule. 73 FR 21528 (April 22,
2008).
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for electricity generated, assuming that
energy conservation standards would
displace the generation of only the
cleanest available fossil fuels. DOE used
the emission rate, specified as 0.0341 t
of NOX emitted per TWh of electricity
generated, associated with an advanced
natural gas combined-cycle power plant,
as specified by NEMS–BT. To estimate
the reduction in NOX emissions, DOE
multiplied this emission rate by the
reduction in electricity generation due
to the new energy conservation
standards considered. DOE’s high
estimate of 0.843 t of NOX per TWh was
based on a nationwide NOX emission
rate for all electrical generation. Use of
such an emission rate assumes that
future power plants displaced are no
cleaner than the plants that are being
used currently to generate electricity.
Under the high estimate assumption,
energy conservation standards also
would have little to no effect on the
generation mix. Based on AEO2008 for
2006, when no regulatory or nonregulatory measures were in effect to
limit NOX emissions, DOE multiplied
this emission rate by the reduction in
electricity generation due to the
standards considered. Table VI–27
shows the range in NOX emission
changes calculated using the low and
high estimate scenarios by TSL. NOX
emission reductions range from 0.59 to
112.84 kt for the TSLs considered.
These changes in NOX emissions are
extremely small, ranging from 0.001 to
0.168 percent of the national base case
emissions forecast by NEMS–BT,
depending on the TSL.
As noted in section IV.L, DOE is able
to report an estimate of the physical
quantity changes in Hg emissions
associated with an energy conservation
standard. Rather than using the NEMS–
BT model, DOE established a range of
Hg rates to estimate the Hg emissions
that could be reduced through
standards. DOE’s low estimate assumed
that future standards would displace
electrical generation from natural gasfired power plants, resulting in an
effective emission rate of zero. The low-
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end emission rate is zero because
natural gas-fired power plants have
virtually zero Hg emissions associated
with their operation.
DOE’s high estimate was based on a
nationwide mercury emission rate from
AEO2008. Because power plant
emission rates are a function of local
regulation, scrubbers, and the mercury
content of coal, it is extremely difficult
to identify a precise high-end emission
rate. Therefore, DOE believes the most
reasonable estimate is based on the
assumption that all displaced coal
generation would have been emitting at
the average emission rate for coal
generation as specified by AEO2008. As
noted previously, because virtually all
mercury emitted from electricity
generation is from coal-fired power
plants, DOE based the emission rate on
the tons of mercury emitted per TWh of
coal-generated electricity. Based on the
emission rate for 2006, DOE derived a
high-end emission rate of 0.0255 tons
per TWh. To estimate the reduction in
mercury emissions, DOE multiplied the
emission rate by the reduction in coalgenerated electricity due to the
standards considered in the utility
impact analysis. The estimated changes
in Hg emissions are shown in Table VI–
27 for commercial refrigeration
equipment from 2012 to 2042. Hg
emission reductions range from 0 to
1.732 tons for the TSLs considered.
These changes in Hg emissions are
extremely small, ranging from 0 to 0.003
percent of the national base case
emissions forecast by NEMS–BT,
depending on the TSL.
The NEMS–BT model used for today’s
rulemaking could not estimate Hg
emission reductions due to new energy
conservation standards, as it assumed
that Hg emissions would be subject to
EPA’s Clean Air Mercury Rule 24
(CAMR). CAMR would have
permanently capped emissions of
mercury for new and existing coal-fired
plants in all states by 2010. As with SO2
and NOX, DOE assumed that under such
a system, energy conservation standards
would have resulted in no physical
effect on these emissions, but might
have resulted in an environmentalrelated economic benefit in the form of
a lower price for emissions allowance
credits, if large enough. DOE estimated
that the change in the Hg emissions
from energy conservation standards
would not be large enough to influence
allowance prices under CAMR.
On February 8, 2008, the DC Circuit
issued its decision in New Jersey v.
24 70
FR 28606 (May 18, 2005).
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16:15 Jan 08, 2009
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Environmental Protection Agency 25 to
vacate CAMR. In light of this
development and because the NEMS–
BT model could not be used to directly
calculate Hg emission reductions, DOE
used the current Hg emission rates
discussed above to calculate the
emissions reductions in Table VI–27.
In the August 2008 NOPR, DOE
considered accounting for a monetary
benefit of CO2 emission reductions
associated with this rulemaking. To put
the potential monetary benefits from
reduced CO2 emissions into a form that
is likely to be most useful to decisionmakers and interested parties, DOE used
the same methods it used to calculate
the net present value of consumer cost
savings. DOE converted the estimated
year-by-year reductions in CO2
emissions into monetary values, which
were then discounted over the life of the
affected equipment to the present using
both 3-percent and 7-percent discount
rates.
In the August 2008 NOPR, DOE
proposed to use the range $0 to $14 per
ton. These estimates were based on an
assumption of no benefit to an average
benefit value reported by the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC).26 DOE derived the IPCC
estimate used as the upper bound value
from an estimate of the mean value of
worldwide impacts due to climate
change, and not just the effects likely to
occur within the United States. As DOE
considers a monetary value for CO2
emission reductions, the value should,
if possible, be restricted to a
representation of those costs and
benefits likely to be experienced in the
United States. DOE explained in the
August 2008 NOPR that it expects such
values would be lower than comparable
global values; however, there currently
are no consensus estimates for the U.S.
25 No. 05–1097, 2008 WL 341338, at * (DC Cir.
Feb. 9, 2008).
26 During the preparation of its most recent
review of the state of climate science, the IPCC
identified various estimates of the present value of
reducing CO2 emissions by 1 ton over the life that
these emissions would remain in the atmosphere.
The estimates reviewed by the IPCC spanned a
range of values. Absent a consensus on any single
estimate of the monetary value of CO2 emissions,
DOE used the estimates identified by the study
cited in ‘‘Summary for Policymakers,’’ prepared by
Working Group II of the IPCC’s Fourth Assessment
Report, to estimate the potential monetary value of
CO2 reductions likely to result from standards
finalized in this rulemaking. According to IPCC, the
mean social cost of carbon (SCC) reported in studies
published in peer-reviewed journals was $43 per
ton of carbon. This translates into about $12 per ton
of CO2. The literature review (Tol 2005) from which
this mean was derived did not report the year in
which these dollars were denominated. However,
DOE understands this estimate was denominated in
1995$. Updating that estimate to 2007$ yields a
SCC of $15 per ton of CO2.
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benefits likely to result from CO2
emission reductions. However, it is
appropriate to use U.S. benefit values,
where available, and not world benefit
values, in its analysis.27 Because U.S.specific estimates are unavailable, and
DOE did not receive any additional
information that would help narrow the
proposed range of domestic benefits,
DOE used the global mean value as an
upper bound U.S. value for purposes of
the sensitivity analysis.
DOE received several comments in
response to the proposed estimated
value of CO2 emissions reductions. In a
comment submitted by Earthjustice on
behalf of itself and NRDC, Earthjustice
questioned both the upper and lower
bounds of DOE’s range of estimated CO2
values, which it argued were too low.
(Earthjustice, No. 38 at p. 7) Earthjustice
also stated that it would be
inappropriate to limit the consideration
to the value of CO2 to a domestic value.
(Earthjustice, No. 38 at p. 13)
Earthjustice suggested that DOE
consider relying on the estimate used in
DOE’s analysis of the impacts of the
Lieberman-Warner Climate Security Act
of 2007 (S. 2191).28 (Earthjustice, No. 38
at p. 2) AHRI stated that DOE should not
rely on the IPCC study or values under
the European Union cap and trade
program, because such a program has
not yet been established in the United
States. (AHRI, No. 33 at p. 6)
Given the uncertainty surrounding
estimates of the social cost of carbon,
relying on any single estimate may be
inadvisable because any estimate will
depend on many assumptions. Working
Group II’s contribution to the Fourth
Assessment Report of the IPCC notes the
following:
The large ranges of SCC are due in the
large part to differences in assumptions
regarding climate sensitivity, response
lags, the treatment of risk and equity,
economic and non-economic impacts,
the inclusion of potentially catastrophic
losses, and discount rates.29
Because of this uncertainty, DOE used
the SCC value from Tol (2005), which
was presented in the IPCC’s Fourth
27 In contrast, most of the estimated costs and
benefits of increasing the efficiency of commercial
refrigeration equipment include only economic
values of impacts that would be experienced in the
United States. DOE generally does not consider
impacts on manufacturers that occur solely outside
of the United States.
28 According to Earthjustice’s analysis of the
Lieberman-Warner Climate Security Act of 2007,
implementation of this legislation would lead to a
CO2 allowance price of $30 per ton in 2020, rising
to $61 per ton in 2030.
29 Climate Change 2007—Impacts, Adaptation
and Vulnerability. Contribution of Working Group
II to the Fourth Assessment Report of the IPCC, 17.
Available at https://www.ipcc-wg2.org (last accessed
Aug. 7, 2008).
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 6 / Friday, January 9, 2009 / Rules and Regulations
Assessment Report and provided a
comprehensive meta-analysis of
estimates for the value of SCC.
Earthjustice commented that this value
was out of date, because Tol released an
update of his 2005 meta-analysis in
September 2007. This update reported
an increase in his mean estimate of SCC
from $43 to $71/ton carbon. Earthjustice
stated that DOE should not continue to
use old data and should update its
sources. (Earthjustice, No. 38 at p. 9)
Although the Tol study was updated
in 2007, the IPCC has not adopted the
updated Tol study for its report. As a
result, DOE continues to rely on the
same study used by the IPCC. Moreover,
DOE notes that the conclusions of Tol
(2007) are similar to the conclusions of
Tol (2005). Tol (2007) continues to
indicate that there is no consensus
regarding the monetary value of
reducing CO2 emissions by 1 ton. The
broad range of values in both Tol
studies are the result of significant
differences in the methodologies used in
the studies Tol summarized. According
to Tol, all of the studies have
shortcomings, largely because the
subject is inherently complex and
uncertain and requires broad
multidisciplinary knowledge. Thus, it is
not certain that the values reported in
Tol (2007) are more accurate or
representative than the values reported
in Tol (2005).
In today’s final rule, DOE is relying on
the range of values proposed in the
August 2008 NOPR, which was based
on the values presented in Tol (2005),
as proposed. DOE does note that DOE
mistakenly assumed that the values
presented in Tol (2005) were in 2000
dollars. In actuality, the values in Tol
(2005) were indicated to be
approximately 1995 values in 1995
dollars. Had DOE at the NOPR stage
applied the correct dollar year of the
values presented in Tol (2005), DOE
would have proposed the range of $0 to
$15 in the August 2008 NOPR.
Additionally, DOE has applied an
annual growth rate of 2.4 percent to the
value of SCC, as suggested by the IPCC
Working Group II (2007, p. 822). This
growth rate is based on estimated
increases in damage from future
emissions that published studies have
reported. As a result, for today’s final
rule, DOE is assigning a range for SCC
of $0 to $20 ($2007) per ton of CO2
emissions.
Earthjustice questioned the use of the
mean estimated social cost of CO2 as an
upper bound of the range. (Earthjustice,
No. 38 at p. 9) However, the upper
bound of the range DOE used is based
on Tol (2005), which reviewed 103
estimates of SCC from 28 published
studies. Tol concluded that when only
peer-reviewed studies published in
recognized journals are considered,
‘‘climate change impacts may be very
uncertain but [it] is unlikely that the
marginal damage costs of carbon
dioxide emissions exceed $50 per ton
carbon [comparable to a 2007 value of
$20 per ton carbon dioxide when
expressed in 2007 U.S. dollars with a
2.4 percent growth rate.]’’
Earthjustice also questioned using $0
as the lower bound of DOE’s estimated
range. (Earthjustice, No. 38 at p. 10) In
setting a lower bound, DOE agrees with
the IPCC Working Group II (2007) report
that ‘‘significant warming across the
globe and the locations of significant
observed changes in many systems
consistent with warming is very
unlikely to be due solely to natural
variability of temperatures or natural
variability of the systems’’ (p. 9), and
thus tentatively concludes that a global
value of zero for reducing emissions
cannot be justified. However, it is
reasonable to allow for the possibility
that the U.S. portion of the global cost
of CO2 emissions may be quite low. In
fact, some of the studies examined by
Tol (2005) reported negative values for
the SCC. As stated in the August 2008
NOPR, DOE is using U.S. benefit values,
and not world benefit values, in its
analysis. Further, U.S. domestic values
will be lower than the global values.
Additionally, the statutory criteria in
EPCA do not require consideration of
global effects. Therefore, DOE is using a
lower bound of $0 per ton of CO2
emissions in estimating the potential
benefits of today’s final rule.
Table VI–28 presents the resulting
estimates of the potential range of net
present value benefits associated with
reducing CO2 emissions.
TABLE VI—28 ESTIMATES OF SAVINGS FROM CO2 EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS UNDER COMMERCIAL REFRIGERATION
EQUIPMENT TRIAL STANDARD LEVELS AT A SEVEN-PERCENT DISCOUNT RATE AND THREE-PERCENT DISCOUNT RATE
Estimated
cumulative
CO2 (Mt)
emission
reductions
TSL
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1
2
3
4
5
........................................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................................
DOE also investigated the potential
monetary impact from today’s energy
conservation standards of reducing SO2,
NOX, and Hg emissions. As previously
stated, DOE’s initial analysis assumed
the presence of nationwide emission
caps on SO2 and Hg, and caps on NOX
emissions in the 28 states covered by
CAIR. In the presence of these caps,
DOE concluded that no physical
reductions in power sector emissions
would occur, but that the lower
generation requirements associated with
energy conservation standards could put
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downward pressure on the prices of
emissions allowances in cap and trade
markets. Estimating this effect is very
difficult because of factors such as
credit banking, which can change the
trajectory of prices. DOE has further
concluded that the effect from energy
conservation standards on SO2
allowance prices is likely to be
negligible, based on runs of the NEMS–
BT model. See chapter 16
(Environmental Assessment) of the TSD
for further details.
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8.52
32.76
50.71
52.59
65.95
Value of estimated
CO2 emission reductions (million
2007$) at 7% discount rate
Value of estimated
CO2 emission reductions (million
2007$) at 3% discount rate
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
to
to
to
to
to
$76.01 ..........
$292.26 ........
$452.49 ........
$469.19 ........
$588.44 ........
to
to
to
to
to
$154.73.
$594.94.
$921.1.
$955.1.
$1,197.85.
Because the courts have vacated the
CAIR rule, projected annual NOX
allowances from NEMS–BT are no
longer relevant. In DOE’s subsequent
analysis, NOX emissions are not
controlled by a nationwide regulatory
system. DOE estimated the national
monetized benefits of NOX and Hg
emissions reductions from today’s rule
based on environmental damage
estimates from the literature. Available
estimates suggest a very wide range of
monetary values for NOX emissions,
ranging from $370 per ton to $3,800 per
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 6 / Friday, January 9, 2009 / Rules and Regulations
ton of NOX from stationary sources,
measured in 2001$,30 or a range of $432
per ton to $4,441 per ton in 2007$.
DOE has conducted research for
today’s final rule and determined that
the basic science linking mercury
emissions from power plants to impacts
on humans is considered highly
uncertain. However, DOE identified two
estimates of the environmental damage
of mercury based on two estimates of
the adverse impact of childhood
exposure to methyl mercury on IQ for
American children, and subsequent loss
of lifetime economic productivity
resulting from these IQ losses. The highend estimate is based on an estimate of
the current aggregate cost of the loss of
IQ in American children that results
from exposure to mercury of U.S. power
plant origin ($1.3 billion per year in
year 2000$), which works out to $32.6
million per ton emitted per year
(2007$).31 The low-end estimate was
$664,000 per ton emitted in 2004$ or
$729,000 per ton in 2007$, which DOE
derived from a published evaluation of
mercury control using different methods
and assumptions from the first study,
but also based on the present value of
the lifetime earnings of children
exposed.32 Table VI–29 and Table VI–30
present the resulting estimates of the
potential range of present value benefits
associated with reducing national NOX
and Hg emissions.
TABLE VI–29—ESTIMATES OF SAVINGS FROM REDUCING NOX AND HG EMISSIONS UNDER COMMERCIAL REFRIGERATION
EQUIPMENT TSLS AT A SEVEN-PERCENT DISCOUNT RATE
Estimated cumulative NOX (kt)
emission
reductions*
TSL
1
2
3
4
5
.........................................................................................
.........................................................................................
.........................................................................................
.........................................................................................
.........................................................................................
0.59
2.27
3.51
3.64
4.56
to
to
to
to
to
14.58 .........
56.04 .........
86.77 .........
89.97 .........
112.84 .......
Value of estimated
NOX emission
reductions
(thousand 2007$)
$64 to $1,578 ........
$245 to $6,067 ......
$380 to $9,394 ......
$394 to $9,741 ......
$494 to $12,216 ....
Estimated cumulative Hg (tons)
emission
reductions *
0
0
0
0
0
Value of estimated
Hg emission
reductions
(thousand 2007$)
to
to
to
to
to
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
0.224 ..............
0.86 ................
1.332 ..............
1.381 ..............
1.732 ..............
to
to
to
to
to
$46.
$177.
$274.
$284.
$356.
* Values in Table VI–29 may not appear to sum to the cumulative values in Table VI–27 due to rounding.
TABLE VI–30—ESTIMATES OF SAVINGS FROM REDUCING NOX AND HG EMISSIONS UNDER COMMERCIAL REFRIGERATION
EQUIPMENT TSLS AT A THREE-PERCENT DISCOUNT RATE
Estimated cumulative NOX (kt)
emission
reductions*
TSL
1
2
3
4
5
.........................................................................................
.........................................................................................
.........................................................................................
.........................................................................................
.........................................................................................
0.59
2.27
3.51
3.64
4.56
to
to
to
to
to
14.58 .........
56.04 .........
86.77 .........
89.97 .........
112.84 .......
Value of estimated
NOX emission
reductions
(thousand 2007$)
$135 to $3,329 ......
$518 to $12,799 ....
$802 to 19,815 ......
$831 to $20,547 ....
$1,042 to $25,769
Estimated cumulative Hg (tons)
emission
reductions *
0
0
0
0
0
Value of estimated
Hg emission
reductions
(thousand 2007$)
to
to
to
to
to
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
0.224 ..............
0.86 ................
1.332 ..............
1.381 ..............
1.732 ..............
to
to
to
to
to
91.
$349.
$540.
$560.
$702.
* Values in Table VI–30 may not appear to sum to the cumulative values in Table VI–27 due to rounding.
7. Other Factors
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES2
EPCA allows the Secretary of Energy,
in determining whether a standard is
economically justified, to consider any
other factors that the Secretary deems to
be relevant. (42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(2)(B)(i)(VII) and 6316(e)(1))
Under this provision, DOE considered
LCC impacts on identifiable groups of
customers, such as customers of
different business types who may be
disproportionately affected by any
national energy conservation standard
level. DOE also considered the
reduction in generated capacity that
could result from the imposition of any
national energy conservation standard
level.
30 2006 Report to Congress on the Costs and
Benefits of Federal Regulations and Unfunded
Mandates on State, Local, and Tribal Entities. Office
of Management and Budget Office of Information
and Regulatory Affairs, Washington, DC.
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D. Conclusion
EPCA contains criteria for prescribing
new or amended energy conservation
standards. It provides that any such
standard for commercial refrigeration
equipment must be designed to achieve
the maximum improvement in energy
efficiency that the Secretary determines
is technologically feasible and
economically justified. (42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(2)(A) and 42 U.S.C. 6316(e)(1))
As stated above, the Secretary must
determine whether the benefits of the
standards exceed its burdens
considering the seven factors discussed
in section II.A. (42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(2)(B)(i) and 42 U.S.C.
6316(e)(1)) A determination is not made
based on any one of these factors in
isolation. The Secretary must weigh
each of these seven factors in total.
Further, the Secretary may not establish
a new or amended standard if such
standard would not result in
‘‘significant conservation of energy.’’ (42
U.S.C. 6295(o)(3)(B) and 42 U.S.C.
6316(e)(1))
In selecting today’s energy
conservation standards for commercial
refrigeration equipment, DOE started by
examining the maximum
technologically feasible levels to
determine whether those levels were
economically justified. Upon finding the
maximum technologically feasible
levels not to be justified, DOE analyzed
the next lower TSL. DOE followed this
procedure until it identified a TSL that
is economically justified.
31 Trasande, L., et al., ‘‘Applying Cost Analyses to
Drive Policy that Protects Children,’’ 1076 Ann.
N.Y. Acad. Sci. 911 (2006).
32 Ted Gayer and Robert Hahn, ‘‘Designing
Environmental Policy: Lessons from the Regulation
of Mercury Emissions,’’ Regulatory Analysis 05–01.
AEI-Brookings Joint Center for Regulatory Studies,
Washington, DC, 2004. A version of this paper was
published in the Journal of Regulatory Economics
in 2006. The estimate was derived by backcalculating the annual benefits per ton from the net
present value of benefits reported in the study.
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 6 / Friday, January 9, 2009 / Rules and Regulations
Table VI–31 summarizes DOE’s
quantitative analysis results for each
TSL it considered for this final rule.
This table presents the results or a range
of results for each TSL, and will aid the
reader in understanding the costs and
benefits of each one. The range of values
for industry impacts represents the
1135
results for the different markup
scenarios that DOE used to estimate
manufacturer impacts.
TABLE VI–31—SUMMARY OF RESULTS BASED UPON THE AEO2008 REFERENCE CASE ENERGY PRICE FORECAST *
TSL 1
Primary Energy Saved (quads) ...........................................
7% Discount Rate .........................................................
3% Discount Rate .........................................................
Generation Capacity Reduction (GW) ** ..............................
NPV (2007$ billion)
7% Discount Rate .........................................................
3% Discount Rate .........................................................
Industry Impacts
Industry NPV (2007$ million) ........................................
Industry NPV (% change) .............................................
Cumulative Emissions Impacts †
CO2 (Mt) ........................................................................
NOX (kt) ........................................................................
Hg (t) .............................................................................
Employment Impacts
Indirect Employment Impacts (2042) ............................
Direct, Domestic Employment Impacts (2012) †† .........
Life-Cycle Cost
Net Savings (%) ............................................................
Net Increase (%) ...........................................................
No Change (%) .............................................................
Mean LCC Savings (2007$) .........................................
Mean PBP (years) ........................................................
TSL 2
TSL 3
TSL 4
TSL 5
0.168
0.041
0.088
(0.121)
0.645
0.159
0.339
(0.465)
1.013
0.250
0.532
(0.720)
1.035
0.256
0.544
(0.747)
1.298
0.321
0.683
(0.936)
$0.33
$0.83
$0.98
$2.60
$1.45
$3.97
$1.414
$3.930
$(2.59)
$(3.79)
0–(7)
0–(1)
8–(39)
1–(7)
(11)–(99)
(2)–(18)
(39)–(148)
(7)–(27)
20–(340)
4–(63)
8.52
0.59–14.58
0–0.224
32.76
2.27–56.04
0–0.86
50.71
3.51–86.77
0–1.332
52.59
3.64–89.97
0–1.381
65.95
4.56–112.84
0–1.732
332
6
1,699
92
2,559
172
2,670
197
3,011
779
18–45
0–0
55–82
211–3501
0.3–1.1
36–65
0–0
35–64
615–4893
0.6–2.4
61–89
0–0
11–39
797–5450
1.2–3.8
70–92
0–0
8–30
785–5419
1.3–3.9
0–92
0–99
1–19
(3959)–5419
1.3–196.8
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES2
* Parentheses indicate negative (¥) values. For LCCs, a negative value means an increase in LCC by the amount indicated.
** Change in installed generation capacity by 2042 based on AEO2008 Reference Case.
† CO emissions impacts include physical reductions at power plants. NO emissions impacts include physical reductions at power plants as
2
X
well as production of emissions allowance credits where NOX emissions are subject to emissions caps.
†† Change in total number of domestic production employees in 2012 due to standards.
First, DOE considered TSL 5, the most
efficient level for all equipment classes.
TSL 5 would likely save an estimated
1.298 quads of energy through 2042, an
amount DOE considers significant.
Discounted at 7 percent, the projected
energy savings through 2042 would be
0.321 quads. For the Nation as a whole,
DOE projects that TSL 5 would result in
a net decrease of $2.59 billion in NPV,
using a discount rate of 7 percent. Five
equipment classes (VOP.RC.M,
VOP.SC.M, SVO.RC.M, SVO.SC.M, and
SOC.RC.M) show negative NPV at TSL
5, primarily due the use of LED lighting
for these cases.33 The emissions
reductions at TSL 5 are 65.95 Mt of CO2
and up to 112.84 kt of NOX. DOE also
estimates that under TSL 5, total
generating capacity in 2042 will
decrease compared to the base case by
0.936 gigawatts (GW).
At TSL 5, DOE projects that the
average commercial refrigeration
equipment customer will experience a
reduction in LCC compared to the
baseline for 10 of the 15 equipment
33 LED lighting for open cases was updated from
the August 2008 NOPR to reflect LED lighting
fixtures currently available for, and specific to,
open cases. DOE also increased the amount of LED
lighting assumed for open cases. See section V.A.2.a
and appendix B of the TSD.
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classes analyzed, while they will
experience an increase in LCC for five
equipment classes (VOP.RC.M,
VOP.SC.M, SVO.RC.M, SOC.RC.M).
These equipment classes are the five
that DOE showed had negative NPV.
Mean LCC savings for all 15 equipment
classes vary from ¥$3,959 to $5,419. At
TSL 5, DOE estimates the fraction of
customers experiencing LCC increases
will vary between 0 and 99 percent
depending on equipment class. The
mean payback period for the average
commercial refrigeration equipment
customer at TSL 5 compared to the
baseline level is projected to be between
1.3 and 196.8 years, depending on
equipment class.
At TSL 5, there is the risk of very
large negative impacts on the industry if
manufacturers’ profit margins are
reduced. The investments required to
modify all equipment lines at the maxtech levels are large. At this level,
manufacturers have to make costly
changes to their production lines. In
addition, the incremental cost of adding
LED lights at TSL 5 are extremely large.
Because customers put a much higher
priority on marketing and displaying
their goods than they do on energy
efficiency, most manufacturers
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expressed a concern that they would be
unable to fully recover the additional
cost incurred when only manufacturing
the most efficient equipment possible. If
manufacturers are not able to fully pass
along these large incremental
production costs, the industry could
lose up to 63 percent of the INPV.
Although TSL 5 is the most efficient
level and thus saves the most energy of
all TSLs, four of the 15 equipment
classes show a reduction in LCC
compared to the baseline. The energy
savings at TSL 5 would reduce installed
generating capacity by 0.94 GW, or
roughly 2.5 large, 400-MW power
plants. DOE estimates the associated
emissions reductions at 66 Mt of CO2.
DOE concludes that at TSL 5, the
benefits of energy savings, generating
capacity reductions, and emission
reductions would be outweighed by the
economic burdens on customers as
indicated by the net decrease in NPV,
long payback periods of up to 197 years,
and a drop in INPV of up to 63 percent.
Consequently, DOE concludes that TSL
5 is not economically justified.
DOE then considered TSL 4, which
provides for all equipment classes the
maximum efficiency levels that the
analysis showed to have positive NPV to
the Nation. DOE projects that the
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average commercial refrigeration
equipment customer will experience a
reduction in LCC compared to the
baseline for all 15 equipment classes
analyzed, ranging from $785 to $5,419
depending on equipment class. The
mean payback period for the average
commercial refrigeration equipment
customer at TSL 4 is projected to be
between 1.3 and 3.9 years compared to
the purchase of baseline equipment.
TSL 4 would likely save an estimated
1.035 quads of energy through 2042, an
amount DOE considers significant.
Discounted at 7 percent, the projected
energy savings through 2042 would be
0.256 quads. For the Nation as a whole,
DOE projects that TSL 4 would result in
a net increase of $1.41 billion in NPV,
using a discount rate of 7 percent. The
estimated emissions reductions at TSL 4
are 42.6 Mt of CO2 and up to 90 kt of
NOX.
Similar to TSL 5, there is a risk at TSL
4 of large negative impacts on the
industry if manufacturers’ profit
margins are reduced. The investments
required at TSL 4 are also large because,
based on the construction of the TSL,
many equipment classes are at the maxtech level. Because a large portion of the
equipment classes are at max-tech, the
incremental manufacturing costs are
also large. If manufacturers are not able
to fully pass along these large
incremental production costs, the
industry could lose up to 27 percent of
the INPV.
After carefully considering the
analysis and weighing the benefits and
burdens of TSL 4, DOE concludes that
the benefits of TSL 4 (in terms of energy
savings to the Nation of 1.035 quads
through 2042, economic benefits of
$1.41 billion in NPV using a discount
rate of 7 percent, significant
environmental benefits in terms of
reduced emissions from power plants,
and national employment benefits)
outweigh the burdens in terms of the
range of possible reductions in INPV of
up to 27 percent, and that TSL 4
represents the maximum improvement
in energy efficiency that is
technologically feasible and
economically justified. Therefore, DOE
is adopting the energy conservation
standards for this equipment at TSL 4.
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES2
VII. Procedural Issues and Regulatory
Review
A. Review Under Executive Order 12866
Section 1(b)(1) of Executive Order
12866, ‘‘Regulatory Planning and
Review,’’ 58 FR 51735 (October 4, 1993),
requires each agency to identify in
writing the market failure or other
problem that it intends to address that
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warrants agency action such as today’s
final rule, and to assess the significance
of that problem in evaluating whether
any new regulation is warranted.
In the August 2008 NOPR for this
rulemaking, DOE requested feedback
related to the possible existence of a
market failure in the commercial
refrigeration equipment industry.
Because the commercial refrigeration
equipment industry is part of the food
merchandising industry, energy
efficiency and energy cost savings are
not the primary drivers of the business.
Selling food products to shoppers is the
primary driver. It is difficult for store
personnel to identify cost-effective
efficiency levels for commercial
refrigeration equipment given reasons
identified in the NOPR, and doing so
may incur transaction costs, thus
reducing cost-effectiveness of the energy
efficiency investment. 73 FR 50128.
DOE sought data on the efficiency levels
of existing commercial refrigeration
equipment by owner, electricity price,
and equipment class. Following the
publication of the August 2008 NOPR
and subsequent public comment period,
DOE did not receive any feedback
related to this request.
Because today’s regulatory action is a
significant regulatory action under
section 3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866,
section 6(a)(3) of the Executive Order
requires DOE to prepare and submit for
review to the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) in OMB an
assessment of the costs and benefits of
today’s rule. Accordingly, DOE
presented to OIRA for review the draft
final rule and other documents prepared
for this rulemaking, including a
regulatory impact analysis (RIA). These
documents are included in the
rulemaking record and are available for
public review in the Resource Room of
DOE’s Building Technologies Program,
950 L’Enfant Plaza, SW., 6th Floor,
Washington, DC 20024, (202) 586–9127,
between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
The August 2008 NOPR contained a
summary of the RIA, which evaluated
the extent to which major alternatives to
standards for commercial refrigeration
equipment could achieve significant
energy savings at reasonable cost, as
compared to the effectiveness of the
proposed rule. 73 FR 50128–29. The
complete RIA (Regulatory Impact
Analysis for Proposed Energy
Conservation Standards for Commercial
Refrigeration Equipment) is contained
in the TSD prepared for today’s rule.
The RIA consists of: (1) A statement of
the problem addressed by this
regulation and the mandate for
government action, (2) a description and
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analysis of the feasible policy
alternatives to this regulation, (3) a
quantitative comparison of the impacts
of the alternatives, and (4) the national
economic impacts of today’s standards.
As explained in the August 2008
NOPR, none of the alternatives DOE
examined would save as much energy or
have an NPV as high as the proposed
standards. That same conclusion applies
to the standards in today’s rule. Also,
several of the alternatives would require
new enabling legislation, because
authority to carry out those alternatives
does not exist. Additional detail on the
regulatory alternatives is found in the
RIA report in the TSD.
B. Review Under the Regulatory
Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.) requires preparation
of an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis (IRFA) for any rule that by law
must be proposed for public comment,
and a final regulatory flexibility analysis
(FRFA) for any such rule that an agency
adopts as a final rule, unless the agency
certifies that the rule, if promulgated,
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. A regulatory flexibility analysis
examines the impact of the rule on
small entities and considers alternative
ways of reducing negative impacts.
Also, as required by Executive Order
13272, ‘‘Proper Consideration of Small
Entities in Agency Rulemaking,’’ 67 FR
53461 (August 16, 2002), DOE
published procedures and policies on
February 19, 2003, to ensure that the
potential impacts of its rules on small
entities are properly considered during
the rulemaking process. 68 FR 7990.
DOE has made its procedures and
policies available on the Office of
General Counsel’s Web site: https://
www.gc.doe.gov.
Small businesses, as defined by the
Small Business Administration (SBA)
for the commercial refrigeration
equipment manufacturing industry, are
manufacturing enterprises with 750
employees or fewer. DOE used the small
business size standards published by
SBA to determine whether any small
entities would be required to comply
with the rule. 61 FR 3286 and codified
at 13 CFR part 121. The size standards
are listed by North American Industry
Classification System (NAICS) code and
industry description. Commercial
refrigeration equipment manufacturing
is classified under NAICS 333415.
DOE interviewed two of the nine
manufacturers of commercial
refrigeration equipment it identified as
small businesses affected by this
rulemaking. 73 FR 50130. DOE reviewed
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the proposed rule under the provisions
of the Regulatory Flexibility Act and the
procedures and policies published on
February 19, 2003. Id. On the basis of
this review, DOE determined that it
could not certify that the proposed
standards (TSL 4) would have no
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. Id.
DOE made this determination because
of the potential impacts of the proposed
standard levels on commercial
refrigeration equipment manufacturers
generally, including small businesses.
Id.
Because of these potential impacts on
small manufacturers, DOE prepared an
IRFA during the NOPR stage of this
rulemaking. DOE provided the IRFA in
its entirety in the August 2008 NOPR,
73 FR 50130–31, and also transmitted a
copy to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy
of the SBA for review. Chapter 13 of the
TSD contains more information about
the impact of this rulemaking on
manufacturers.
The IRFA divided potential impacts
on small businesses into two broad
categories: (1) Impacts associated with
commercial refrigeration equipment
design and manufacturing, and (2)
impacts associated with the effect on
customers’ ability to merchandise
products by limiting the flexibility in
choosing design options. The
commercial refrigeration industry is
highly customized, and manufacturers
were concerned that limiting the
choices in design options would
commoditize the industry and reduce
profit margins. However, this concern
was echoed by all manufacturers, not
just small business manufacturers.
DOE has prepared a FRFA for this
rulemaking, which is presented in the
following discussion. DOE has
transmitted a copy of this FRFA to the
Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the SBA
for review. The FRFA below is written
in accordance with the requirements of
the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
1. Reasons for the Final Rule
Part A–1 of Title III of EPCA
addresses the energy efficiency of
certain types of commercial and
industrial equipment. (42 U.S.C. 6311–
6317) EPACT 2005, Public Law 109–58,
included an amendment to Part A–1
requiring that DOE prescribe energy
conservation standards for the
commercial refrigeration equipment that
is the subject of this rulemaking.
(EPACT 2005, Section 136(c); 42 U.S.C.
6313(c)(4)(A)) DOE publishes today’s
final rule pursuant to Part A–1. The
commercial refrigeration equipment test
procedures appear at 10 CFR parts 430–
431.
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2. Objectives of, and Legal Basis for, the
Rule
EPCA requires new and amended
standards to be designed to achieve the
maximum improvement in energy
efficiency that is technologically
feasible and economically justified (see
section II.B of this preamble). To
determine whether economic
justification exists, DOE reviews
comments received and conducts
analysis to determine whether the
economic benefits of the new standard
exceed the burdens to the greatest extent
practicable, taking into consideration
seven factors set forth in 42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(2)(B) and 6316(e)(1) (see section
II.B of this preamble). Further
information concerning the background
of this rulemaking is provided in
chapter 1 of the TSD.
3. Description and Estimated Number of
Small Entities Regulated
DOE reviewed AHRI’s listing of
commercial refrigeration equipment
manufacturer members and surveyed
the industry to develop a list of every
manufacturer. DOE also asked interested
parties and AHRI representatives within
the industry if they were aware of any
other small business manufacturers.
DOE then looked at publicly available
data and contacted manufacturers, when
needed, to determine if they meet the
SBA’s definition of a small business
manufacturing facility and if their
manufacturing facilities are located
within the United States. Based on this
analysis, DOE identified nine small
commercial refrigeration equipment
manufacturers and conducted on-site
interviews with two of them. See
chapter 13 of the TSD for further
discussion about the methodology DOE
used in the manufacturer impact
analysis.
4. Description and Estimate of
Compliance Requirements
Potential impacts on manufacturers,
including small businesses, come from
impacts associated with commercial
refrigeration equipment design and
manufacturing. All manufacturers,
including small businesses, would have
to develop designs to comply with
higher TSLs. Product redesign costs
tend to be fixed and do not scale with
sales volume. Thus, small
manufacturers would be at a relative
disadvantage at higher TSLs because
research and development efforts would
be on the same scale as those for larger
companies. Furthermore, the level of
research and development needed to
meet energy conservation standards
increases with more stringent energy
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1137
conservation standards. DOE expects
that small manufacturers will have more
difficulty funding the required research
and development necessary to meet
energy conservation standards than
larger manufacturers. However, as
explained in part 6 of the IRFA,
‘‘Significant Alternatives to the
Proposed Rule,’’ DOE explicitly
considered the impacts on small
manufacturers of commercial
refrigeration equipment in selecting TSL
4, rather than selecting a higher
standard level. DOE expects that the
differential impact on small
manufacturers of commercial
refrigeration equipment would be
smaller in moving from TSL 3 to TSL 4
than it would be in moving from TSL 4
to TSL 5.
5. Significant Issues Raised by Public
Comments
DOE summarized comments from
interested parties, including commercial
refrigeration equipment manufacturers,
in sections IV and V of this preamble.
However, DOE did not receive any
comments regarding impacts specific to
small business manufacturers for the
adoption of TSL 4 or the alternatives
identified in section 6 of the IRFA,
‘‘Significant Alternatives to the Rule.’’
6. Steps DOE Has Taken To Minimize
the Economic Impact on Small
Manufacturers
In consideration of the benefits and
burdens of standards, including the
burdens posed on small manufacturers,
DOE concluded that TSL 4 is the highest
level that can be justified for
commercial refrigeration equipment. As
explained in part 6 of the IRFA,
‘‘Significant Alternatives to the Rule,’’
DOE explicitly considered the impacts
on small manufacturers of commercial
refrigeration equipment in selecting TSL
4. Levels at TSL 5 would place
excessive burdens on manufacturers,
including small manufacturers, of
commercial refrigeration equipment.
Such burdens would include research
and development costs and also a
potential reduction of profit margins by
limiting the flexibility of customers to
choose design options. However, the
differential impact on small businesses
is expected to be lower in moving from
TSL 3 to TSL 4 than in moving from
TSL 4 to TSL 5, because research and
development efforts are less at lower
TSLs. Chapter 13 of the TSD contains
additional information about the impact
of this rulemaking on manufacturers.
Section VI.C.2 discusses how small
business impacts entered into DOE’s
selection of today’s standards for
commercial refrigeration equipment.
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DOE made its decision regarding
standards by beginning with the highest
level considered (TSL 5) and
successively eliminating TSLs until it
found a TSL that is both technically
feasible and economically justified,
taking into account other EPCA criteria.
As discussed in section VI.C.2.e, DOE
expects today’s standard to have little or
no differential impact on small
manufacturers of commercial
refrigeration equipment.
Finally, in the NOPR, DOE requested
comment on the impacts on small
business manufacturers of TSL 4 and
any other alternatives to the proposed
rule. DOE received no comments in
reference to any undue burden placed
on small manufacturers.
C. Review Under the Paperwork
Reduction Act
DOE stated in the August 2008 NOPR
that this rulemaking would impose no
new information and recordkeeping
requirements, and that OMB clearance
is not required under the Paperwork
Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
73 FR 50131–32. DOE received no
comments on this in response to the
August 2008 NOPR, and, as with the
proposed rule, today’s rule imposes no
information and recordkeeping
requirements. Therefore, DOE has taken
no further action in this rulemaking
with respect to the Paperwork
Reduction Act.
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES2
D. Review Under the National
Environmental Policy Act
DOE prepared an environmental
assessment of the impacts of today’s
standards which it published as chapter
16 within the TSD for the final rule.
DOE found the environmental effects
associated with today’s various standard
levels for commercial refrigeration
equipment to be insignificant.
Therefore, DOE is issuing a Finding of
No Significant Impact (FONSI) pursuant
to the National Environmental Policy
Act of 1969 (NEPA) (42 U.S.C. 4321 et
seq.), the regulations of the Council on
Environmental Quality (40 CFR parts
1500–1508), and DOE’s regulations for
compliance with NEPA (10 CFR part
1021). The FONSI is available in the
docket for this rulemaking.
E. Review Under Executive Order 13132
DOE reviewed this rule pursuant to
Executive Order 13132, ‘‘Federalism,’’
64 FR 43255 (August 4, 1999), which
imposes certain requirements on
agencies formulating and implementing
policies or regulations that preempt
State law or that have federalism
implications. In accordance with DOE’s
statement of policy describing the
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intergovernmental consultation process
it will follow in the development of
regulations that have federalism
implications, 65 FR 13735 (March 14,
2000), DOE examined the proposed rule
and determined that the rule would not
have a substantial direct effect on the
States, on the relationship between the
National Government and the States, or
on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of Government. 73 FR 50132.
DOE received no comments on this
issue in response to the August 2008
NOPR, and its conclusions on this issue
are the same for the final rule as they
were for the proposed rule. Therefore,
DOE is taking no further action in
today’s final rule with respect to
Executive Order 13132.
F. Review Under Executive Order 12988
With respect to the review of existing
regulations and the promulgation of
new regulations, section 3(a) of
Executive Order 12988, ‘‘Civil Justice
Reform,’’ 61 FR 4729 (February 7, 1996),
imposes on Federal agencies the general
duty to adhere to the following
requirements: (1) Eliminate drafting
errors and ambiguity, (2) write
regulations to minimize litigation, and
(3) provide a clear legal standard for
affected conduct rather than a general
standard and promote simplification
and burden reduction. Section 3(b) of
Executive Order 12988 specifically
requires that executive agencies make
every reasonable effort to ensure that the
regulation: (1) Clearly specifies the
preemptive effect, if any; (2) clearly
specifies any effect on existing Federal
law or regulation; (3) provides a clear
legal standard for affected conduct
while promoting simplification and
burden reduction; (4) specifies the
retroactive effect, if any; (5) adequately
defines key terms; and (6) addresses
other important issues affecting clarity
and general draftsmanship under any
guidelines issued by the Attorney
General. Section 3(c) of Executive Order
12988 requires executive agencies to
review regulations in light of applicable
standards in section 3(a) and section
3(b) to determine whether they are met
or it is unreasonable to meet one or
more of them. DOE has completed the
required review and determined that, to
the extent permitted by law, the final
regulations meet the relevant standards
of Executive Order 12988.
G. Review Under the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995
As indicated in the August 2008
NOPR, DOE reviewed the proposed rule
under Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4)
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(UMRA), which imposes requirements
on Federal agencies when their
regulatory actions will have certain
types of impacts on State, local, and
Tribal governments and the private
sector. 73 FR 50132. DOE concluded
that although this rule would not
contain an intergovernmental mandate,
it may result in expenditure of $100
million or more in one year by the
private sector. Id. Therefore, in the
August 2008 NOPR, DOE addressed the
UMRA requirements that it prepare a
statement as to the basis, costs, benefits,
and economic impacts of the proposed
rule, and that it identify and consider
regulatory alternatives to the proposed
rule. Id. DOE received no comments
concerning the UMRA in response to
the August 2008 NOPR, and its
conclusions on this issue are the same
for the final rule as they were for the
proposed rule. Therefore, DOE is taking
no further action in today’s final rule
with respect to the UMRA.
H. Review Under the Treasury and
General Government Appropriations
Act, 1999
DOE determined that, for this
rulemaking, it need not prepare a
Family Policymaking Assessment under
Section 654 of the Treasury and General
Government Appropriations Act, 1999
(Pub. L. 105–277). Id. DOE received no
comments concerning Section 654 in
response to the August 2008 NOPR, and,
therefore, takes no further action in
today’s final rule with respect to this
provision.
I. Review Under Executive Order 12630
DOE determined under Executive
Order 12630, ‘‘Governmental Actions
and Interference with Constitutionally
Protected Property Rights,’’ 53 FR 8859
(March 18, 1988), that today’s rule
would not result in any takings that
might require compensation under the
Fifth Amendment to the U.S.
Constitution. 73 FR 50132. DOE
received no comments concerning
Executive Order 12630 in response to
the August 2008 NOPR, and, therefore,
takes no further action in today’s final
rule with respect to this Executive
Order.
J. Review Under the Treasury and
General Government Appropriations
Act, 2001
Section 515 of the Treasury and
General Government Appropriations
Act, 2001 (44 U.S.C. 3516 note) provides
for agencies to review most
disseminations of information to the
public under guidelines established by
each agency pursuant to general
guidelines issued by OMB. OMB’s
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guidelines were published at 67 FR
8452 (February 22, 2002), and DOE’s
guidelines were published at 67 FR
62446 (October 7, 2002). DOE has
reviewed today’s final rule under the
OMB and DOE guidelines and has
concluded that it is consistent with
applicable policies in those guidelines.
K. Review Under Executive Order 13211
Executive Order 13211, ‘‘Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use,’’ 66 FR 28355 (May
22, 2001) requires Federal agencies to
prepare and submit to OIRA a Statement
of Energy Effects for any significant
energy action. DOE determined that the
proposed rule was not a ‘‘significant
energy action’’ within the meaning of
Executive Order 13211. 73 FR 50133.
Accordingly, it did not prepare a
Statement of Energy Effects on the
proposed rule. DOE received no
comments on this issue in response to
the August 2008 NOPR. As with the
proposed rule, DOE has concluded that
today’s final rule is not a significant
energy action within the meaning of
Executive Order 13211, and has not
prepared a Statement of Energy Effects
on the rule.
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES2
L. Review Under the Information
Quality Bulletin for Peer Review
On December 16, 2004, OMB, in
consultation with the Office of Science
and Technology, issued its ‘‘Final
Information Quality Bulletin for Peer
Review (the Bulletin). 70 FR 2664
(January 14, 2005). The purpose of the
Bulletin is to enhance the quality and
credibility of the Government’s
scientific information. The Bulletin
establishes that certain scientific
information shall be peer reviewed by
qualified specialists before it is
disseminated by the Federal
Government. As indicated in the August
2008 NOPR, this includes influential
scientific information related to agency
regulatory actions, such as the analyses
in this rulemaking. 73 FR 50133.
As set forth in the August 2008 NOPR,
DOE held formal in-progress peer
reviews of the types of analyses and
processes that DOE has used to develop
the energy efficiency standards in
today’s rule, and issued a report on
these peer reviews. Id.
M. Congressional Notification
As required by 5 U.S.C. 801, DOE will
submit to Congress a report regarding
the issuance of today’s final rule prior
to the effective date set forth at the
outset of this notice. The report will
state that it has been determined that
the rule is a ‘‘major rule’’ as defined by
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5 U.S.C. 804(2). DOE also will submit
the supporting analyses to the
Comptroller General in the U.S.
Government Accountability Office
(GAO) and make them available to each
House of Congress.
VIII. Approval of the Office of the
Secretary
The Secretary of Energy has approved
publication of today’s final rule.
Issued in Washington, DC, on December
31, 2008.
John F. Mizroch,
Acting Assistant Secretary, Energy Efficiency
and Renewable Energy.
List of Subjects in 10 CFR Part 431
Administrative practice and
procedure, Confidential business
information, Energy conservation,
Incorporation by reference.
■ For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, chapter II of title 10, Code of
Federal Regulations, part 431 is
amended as set forth below.
PART 431—ENERGY EFFICIENCY
PROGRAM FOR CERTAIN
COMMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL
EQUIPMENT
1. The authority citation for part 431
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 6291–6317.
2. Section 431.62 of subpart C is
amended by adding in alphabetical
order new definitions for ‘‘air-curtain
angle,’’ ‘‘commercial hybrid refrigerator,
freezer, and refrigerator-freezer,’’ ‘‘door
angle,’’ ‘‘horizontal closed,’’ ‘‘horizontal
open,’’ ‘‘semivertical open,’’ ‘‘vertical
closed,’’ ‘‘vertical open,’’ and ‘‘wedge
case’’ to read as follows:
■
§ 431.62 Definitions concerning
commercial refrigerators, freezers, and
refrigerator-freezers.
Air-curtain angle means:
(1) For equipment without doors and
without a discharge air grille or
discharge air honeycomb, the angle
between a vertical line extended down
from the highest point on the
manufacturer’s recommended load limit
line and the load limit line itself, when
the equipment is viewed in crosssection; and
(2) For all other equipment without
doors, the angle formed between a
vertical line and the straight line drawn
by connecting the point at the inside
edge of the discharge air opening with
the point at the inside edge of the return
air opening, when the equipment is
viewed in cross-section.
*
*
*
*
*
Commercial hybrid refrigerator,
freezer, and refrigerator-freezer means a
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1139
commercial refrigerator, freezer, or
refrigerator-freezer that has two or more
chilled and/or frozen compartments that
are:
(1) In two or more different
equipment families,
(2) Contained in one cabinet, and
(3) Sold as a single unit.
*
*
*
*
*
Door angle means:
(1) For equipment with flat doors, the
angle between a vertical line and the
line formed by the plane of the door,
when the equipment is viewed in crosssection; and
(2) For equipment with curved doors,
the angle formed between a vertical line
and the straight line drawn by
connecting the top and bottom points
where the display area glass joins the
cabinet, when the equipment is viewed
in cross-section.
*
*
*
*
*
Horizontal Closed means equipment
with hinged or sliding doors and a door
angle greater than or equal to 45°.
*
*
*
*
*
Horizontal Open means equipment
without doors and an air-curtain angle
greater than or equal to 80° from the
vertical.
*
*
*
*
*
Semivertical Open means equipment
without doors and an air-curtain angle
greater than or equal to 10° and less
than 80° from the vertical.
*
*
*
*
*
Vertical Closed means equipment
with hinged or sliding doors and a door
angle less than 45°.
Vertical Open means equipment
without doors and an air-curtain angle
greater than or equal to 0° and less than
10° from the vertical.
Wedge case means a commercial
refrigerator, freezer, or refrigeratorfreezer that forms the transition between
two regularly shaped display cases.
■ 3. Section 431.63 of subpart C is
revised to read as follows:
§ 431.63 Materials incorporated by
reference.
(a) General. We incorporate by
reference the following standards into
Subpart C of Part 431. The material
listed has been approved for
incorporation by reference by the
Director of the Federal Register in
accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552(a) and 1
CFR 51. Any subsequent amendment to
a standard by the standard-setting
organization will not affect the DOE
regulations unless and until amended
by DOE. Material is incorporated as it
exists on the date of the approval and
a notice of any change in the material
will be published in the Federal
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Register. All approved material is
available for inspection at the National
Archives and Records Administration
(NARA). For information on the
availability of this material at NARA,
call 202–741–6030 or go to https://
www.archives.gov/federal_register/
code_of_federal_regulations/
ibr_locations.html. Also, this material is
available for inspection at U.S.
Department of Energy, Office of Energy
Efficiency and Renewable Energy,
Building Technologies Program, 6th
Floor, 950 L’Enfant Plaza, SW.,
Washington, DC 20024, 202–586–2945,
or go to: https://www1.eere.energy.gov/
buildings/appliance_standards/.
Standards can be obtained from the
sources listed below.
(b) ANSI. American National
Standards Institute, 25 W. 43rd Street,
4th Floor, New York, NY 10036, 212–
642–4900, or go to https://www.ansi.org:
(1) ANSI /AHAM HRF–1–2004,
Energy, Performance and Capacity of
Household Refrigerators, RefrigeratorFreezers and Freezers, approved July 7,
2004, IBR approved for § 431.64.
(2) [Reserved]
(c) ARI. Air-Conditioning and
Refrigeration Institute, 4100 N. Fairfax
Dr., Suite 200, Arlington, VA 22203, or
https://www.ari.org/std/standards.html:
(1) ARI Standard 1200–2006,
Performance Rating of Commercial
Refrigerated Display Merchandisers and
Storage Cabinets, 2006, IBR approved
for §§ 431.64 and 431.66.
(2) [Reserved]
■ 4. Section 431.66 of subpart C is
amended by adding new paragraphs
(a)(3) and (d) to read as follows:
§ 431.66 Energy conservation standards
and their effective dates.
(a) * * *
Equipment
class designation *
Maximum daily energy consumption
(kWh/day)
≥32
<32
VOP.RC.M ...
VOP.RC.L ....
0.82 × TDA + 4.07
2.27 × TDA + 6.85
38 (M)
0 (L)
38 (M)
0 (L)
38 (M)
0 (L)
38 (M)
0 (L)
38 (M)
0 (L)
38 (M)
0 (L)
38 (M)
0 (L)
38 (M)
0 (L)
≥32
<32
≥32
<32
≥32
<32
≥32
<32
≥32
<32
≥32
<32
≥32
<32
≥32
<32
SVO.RC.M ...
SVO.RC.L ....
HZO.RC.M ...
HZO.RC.L ....
VCT.RC.M ....
VCT.RC.L .....
HCT.RC.M ...
HCT.RC.L ....
VCS.RC.M ...
VCS.RC.L ....
HCS.RC.M ...
HCS.RC.L ....
SOC.RC.M ...
SOC.RC.L ....
VOP.SC.M ...
VOP.SC.L ....
0.83
2.27
0.35
0.57
0.22
0.56
0.16
0.34
0.11
0.23
0.11
0.23
0.51
1.08
1.74
4.37
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
×
TDA + 3.18
TDA + 6.85
TDA + 2.88
TDA + 6.88
TDA + 1.95
TDA + 2.61
TDA + 0.13
TDA + 0.26
V + 0.26
V + 0.54
V + 0.26
V + 0.54
TDA + 0.11
TDA + 0.22
TDA + 4.71
TDA + 11.82
38 (M)
0 (L)
38 (M)
0 (L)
¥15 (I)
≥32
<32
≥32
<32
≤¥5 **
SVO.SC.M ...
SVO.SC.L ....
HZO.SC.M ...
HZO.SC.L ....
VOP.RC.I .....
1.73
4.34
0.77
1.92
2.89
×
×
×
×
×
TDA
TDA
TDA
TDA
TDA
Semivertical Open (SVO) ....
Horizontal Open (HZO) .......
Vertical Closed Transparent
(VCT).
Horizontal Closed Transparent (HCT).
Vertical Closed Solid (VCS)
Horizontal Closed Solid
(HCS).
Service Over Counter
(SVO).
Vertical Open (VOP) ...........
SVO.RC.I .....
HZO.RC.I .....
VCT.RC.I ......
2.89 × TDA + 8.7
0.72 × TDA + 8.74
0.66 × TDA + 3.05
HCT.RC.I .....
0.4 × TDA + 0.31
VCS.RC.I .....
HCS.RC.I .....
0.27 × V + 0.63
0.27 × V + 0.63
SOC.RC.I .....
1.26 × TDA + 0.26
VOP.SC.I .....
5.55 × TDA + 15.02
Semivertical Open (SVO) ....
Horizontal Open (HZO) .......
Vertical Closed Transparent
(VCT).
Horizontal Closed Transparent (HCT).
Remote Condensing Commercial Refrigerators and
Commercial Freezers.
Equipment family
Remote (RC)
Vertical Open (VOP) ...........
38 (M)
0 (L)
Semivertical Open (SVO) ....
Equipment category
Condensing
unit
configuration
SVO.SC.I .....
HZO.SC.I .....
VCT.SC.I ......
5.52 × TDA + 14.63
2.44 × TDA + 9
0.67 × TDA + 3.29
HCT.SC.I ......
0.56 × TDA + 0.43
Rating
temp. (°F)
Horizontal Open (HZO) .......
Vertical Closed Transparent
(VCT).
Horizontal Closed Transparent (HCT).
Vertical Closed Solid (VCS)
Self-Contained Commercial
Refrigerators and Commercial Freezers without
Doors.
Self-Contained (SC).
Horizontal Closed Solid
(HCS).
Service Over Counter
(SOC).
Vertical Open (VOP) ...........
Semivertical Open (SVO) ....
Horizontal Open ..................
Commercial Ice-Cream
Freezers.
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES2
(3) The term ‘‘TDA’’ means the total
display area (ft2) of the case, as defined
in the ARI Standard 1200–2006,
appendix D (incorporated by reference,
see § 431.63).
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Each commercial refrigerator,
freezer, and refrigerator-freezer with a
self-contained condensing unit and
without doors; commercial refrigerator,
freezer, and refrigerator-freezer with a
remote condensing unit; and
commercial ice-cream freezer
manufactured on or after January 1,
2012, shall have a daily energy
consumption (in kilowatt hours per day)
that does not exceed the levels
specified:
(1) For equipment other than hybrid
equipment, refrigerator-freezers or
wedge cases:
Remote (RC)
Self-Contained (SC).
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Vertical Open (VOP) ...........
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+
+
+
+
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5.55
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 6 / Friday, January 9, 2009 / Rules and Regulations
Equipment category
Condensing
unit
configuration
Rating
temp. (°F)
Equipment family
Operating
temp. (°F)
Equipment
class designation *
1141
Maximum daily energy consumption
(kWh/day)
VCS.SC.I ......
HCS.SC.I .....
0.38 × V + 0.88
0.38 × V + 0.88
SOC.SC.I .....
Vertical Closed Solid (VCS)
Horizontal Closed Solid
(HCS).
Service Over Counter
(SVO).
1.76 × TDA + 0.36
* The
meaning of the letters in this column is indicated in the three columns to the left.
freezer is defined in 10 CFR 431.62 as a commercial freezer that is designed to operate at or below ¥5 °F (¥21 °C) and that the
manufacturer designs, markets, or intends for the storing, displaying, or dispensing of ice cream.
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES2
** Ice-cream
(2) For commercial refrigeration
equipment with two or more
compartments (i.e., hybrid refrigerators,
hybrid freezers, hybrid refrigeratorfreezers, and non-hybrid refrigeratorfreezers), the maximum daily energy
consumption (MDEC) for each model
shall be the sum of the MDEC values for
all of its compartments. For each
compartment, measure the TDA or
volume of that compartment, and
determine the appropriate equipment
class based on that compartment’s
equipment family, condensing unit
configuration, and designed operating
temperature. The MDEC limit for each
compartment shall be the calculated
value obtained by entering that
compartment’s TDA or volume into the
standard equation in paragraph (d)(1) of
this section for that compartment’s
equipment class. Measure the calculated
daily energy consumption (CDEC) or
total daily energy consumption (TDEC)
for the entire case:
(i) For remote condensing commercial
hybrid refrigerators, hybrid freezers,
hybrid refrigerator-freezers, and nonhybrid refrigerator-freezers, where two
or more independent condensing units
each separately cool only one
compartment, measure the total
refrigeration load of each compartment
separately according to the ARI
Standard 1200–2006 test procedure
(incorporated by reference, see
§ 431.63). Calculate compressor energy
consumption (CEC) for each
compartment using Table 1 in ARI
Standard 1200–2006 using the saturated
evaporator temperature for that
compartment. The CDEC for the entire
case shall be the sum of the CEC for
each compartment, fan energy
consumption (FEC), lighting energy
consumption (LEC), anti-condensate
energy consumption (AEC), defrost
energy consumption (DEC), and
condensate evaporator pan energy
consumption (PEC) (as measured in ARI
Standard 1200–2006).
(ii) For remote condensing
commercial hybrid refrigerators, hybrid
freezers, hybrid refrigerator-freezers,
and non-hybrid refrigerator-freezers,
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Jkt 217001
where two or more compartments are
cooled collectively by one condensing
unit, measure the total refrigeration load
of the entire case according to the ARI
Standard 1200–2006 test procedure
(incorporated by reference, see
§ 431.63). Calculate a weighted
saturated evaporator temperature for the
entire case by:
(A) Multiplying the saturated
evaporator temperature of each
compartment by the volume of that
compartment (as measured in ARI
Standard 1200–2006),
(B) Summing the resulting values for
all compartments, and
(C) Dividing the resulting total by the
total volume of all compartments.
Calculate the CEC for the entire case
using Table 1 in ARI Standard 1200–
2006 (incorporated by reference, see
§ 431.63), using the total refrigeration
load and the weighted average saturated
evaporator temperature. The CDEC for
the entire case shall be the sum of the
CEC, FEC, LEC, AEC, DEC, and PEC.
(iii) For self-contained commercial
hybrid refrigerators, hybrid freezers,
hybrid refrigerator-freezers, and nonhybrid refrigerator-freezers, measure the
TDEC for the entire case according to
the ARI Standard 1200–2006 test
procedure (incorporated by reference,
see § 431.63).
(3) For remote-condensing and selfcontained wedge cases, measure the
CDEC or TDEC according to the ARI
Standard 1200–2006 test procedure
(incorporated by reference, see
§ 431.63). The MDEC for each model
shall be the amount derived by
incorporating into the standards
equation in paragraph (d)(1) of this
section for the appropriate equipment
class a value for the TDA that is the
product of:
(i) The vertical height of the aircurtain (or glass in a transparent door)
and (ii) The largest overall width of the
case, when viewed from the front.
Appendix
[The following letter from the Department
of Justice will not appear in the Code of
Federal Regulations.]
PO 00000
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Department of Justice, Antitrust Division,
Main Justice Building, 950 Pennsylvania
Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20530–
0001, (202) 514–2401/(202) 616–2645(f,
antitrust@justice.usdoj.gov, https://
www.usdoj.gov.
October 24, 2008.
Warren Belmar, Esq., Deputy General
Counsel for Energy Policy, Department of
Energy, Washington, DC 20585.
Dear Deputy General Counsel Belmar: I am
responding to your August 12, 2008 letter
seeking the views of the Attorney General
about the potential impact on competition of
the proposed energy efficiency standards for
commercial refrigeration equipment. The
Energy Policy and Conservation Act
(‘‘EPCA’’) authorizes the Department of
Energy (‘‘DOE’’) to establish energy
conservation standards for a number of
appliances where DOE determines that those
standards would be technologically feasible,
economically justified, and result in
significant energy savings.
Your request was submitted pursuant to
Section 325(o)(2)(B)(i) of the Energy Policy
and Conservation Act, 42 U.S.C. § 6295
(‘‘EPCA’’), which states that, before the
Secretary of Energy may prescribe a new or
amended energy conservation standard, the
Secretary shall ask the Attorney General to
make a determination of ‘‘the impact of any
lessening of competition * * * that is likely
to result from the imposition of standard.’’
The Attorney General’s responsibility for
responding to requests from other
departments about the effect of a program on
competition has been delegated to the
Assistant Attorney General for the Antitrust
Division in 28 CFR § 0.40(g). In conducting
its analysis the Antitrust Division examines
whether a proposed standard may lessen
competition, for example, by placing certain
manufacturers of a product at an unjustified
competitive disadvantage compared to other
manufacturers, or by inducing avoidable
inefficiencies in production or distribution of
particular products. In addition to harming
consumers directly through higher prices,
these effects could undercut the ultimate
goals of the legislation.
Along with your request, you sent us the
draft final rule and a number of other
documents relating to commercial
refrigeration equipment, including a hearing
transcript and the names of parties
interviewed by DOE’s consultant.
We have concluded that the proposed
standards would not adversely affect
competition. In reaching this conclusion, we
note that the proposed standards were
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mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES2
developed taking into account comments by
commercial refrigeration equipment
manufacturers, the American Society of
Heating, Refrigerating, and Air-Conditioning
Engineers, the American Council for an
Energy Efficient Economy and electric
utilities. We note further that all key
components are available for purchase by any
manufacturer; therefore no manufacturer has
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16:21 Jan 08, 2009
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a technological advantage in meeting the
proposed standards. Finally, DOE found no
significant differences between the concerns
of large and small manufacturers, and we
found no evidence that certain manufacturers
would be placed at a competitive
disadvantage to other manufacturers.
PO 00000
In conclusion, the Antitrust Division does
not believe the proposed final rule would
adversely affect competition.
Yours sincerely,
Deborah A. Garza,
Acting Assistant Attorney General.
[FR Doc. E8–31449 Filed 1–8–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 6 (Friday, January 9, 2009)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 1092-1142]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-31449]
[[Page 1091]]
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Part III
Department of Energy
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
10 CFR Part 431
Energy Conservation Program for Commercial and Industrial Equipment;
Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 6 / Friday, January 9, 2009 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 1092]]
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
10 CFR Part 431
[Docket Number EERE-2006-BT-STD-0126]
RIN 1904-AB59
Energy Conservation Program for Commercial and Industrial
Equipment: Energy Conservation Standards for Commercial Ice-Cream
Freezers; Self-Contained Commercial Refrigerators, Commercial Freezers,
and Commercial Refrigerator-Freezers Without Doors; and Remote
Condensing Commercial Refrigerators, Commercial Freezers, and
Commercial Refrigerator-Freezers
AGENCY: Department of Energy, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable
Energy.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Energy (DOE) is adopting new energy
conservation standards for commercial ice-cream freezers; self-
contained commercial refrigerators, commercial freezers, and commercial
refrigerator-freezers without doors; and remote condensing commercial
refrigerators, commercial freezers, and commercial refrigerator-
freezers. DOE has determined that energy conservation standards for
these types of equipment would result in significant conservation of
energy, and are technologically feasible and economically justified.
DATES: The effective date of this rule is March 10, 2009. The standards
established in today's final rule will be applicable starting January
1, 2012. Incorporation by reference of the material listed is approved
by the Director of the Federal Register on March 10, 2009.
ADDRESSES: For access to the docket to read background documents, the
technical support document, transcripts of the public meetings in this
proceeding, or comments received, visit the U.S. Department of Energy,
Resource Room of the Building Technologies Program, 950 L'Enfant Plaza,
SW., 6th Floor, Washington, DC 20024, (202) 586-2945, between 9 a.m.
and 4 p.m., Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays. Please call
Brenda Edwards at the above telephone number for additional information
regarding visiting the Resource Room. (Note: DOE's Freedom of
Information Reading Room no longer houses rulemaking materials.) You
may also obtain copies of certain previous rulemaking documents in this
proceeding (i.e., framework document, advance notice of proposed
rulemaking, notice of proposed rulemaking), draft analyses, public
meeting materials, and related test procedure documents from the Office
of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy's Web site at https://
www.eere.energy.gov/buildings/appliance_standards/commercial/
refrigeration_equipment.html.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Charles Llenza, U.S. Department of Energy, Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy, Building Technologies Program, EE-2J, 1000
Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20585-0121, (202) 586-2192,
Charles.Llenza@ee.doe.gov.
Francine Pinto, Esq., U.S. Department of Energy, Office of General
Counsel, GC-72, 1000 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20585-
0121, (202) 586-9507, Francine.Pinto@hq.doe.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Summary of the Final Rule and Its Benefits
A. The Standard Levels
B. Benefits to Customers of Commercial Refrigeration Equipment
C. Impact on Manufacturers
D. National Benefits
II. Introduction
A. Authority
B. Background
1. History of Standards Rulemaking for Commercial Refrigeration
Equipment
III. General Discussion
A. Test Procedures
B. Technological Feasibility
1. General
2. Maximum Technologically Feasible Levels
C. Energy Savings
D. Economic Justification
1. Specific Criteria
a. Economic Impact on Commercial Customers and Manufacturers
b. Life-Cycle Costs
c. Energy Savings
d. Lessening of Utility or Performance of Equipment
e. Impact of Any Lessening of Competition
f. Need of the Nation To Conserve Energy
g. Other Factors
2. Rebuttable Presumption
IV. Methodology and Discussion of Comments on Methodology
A. Market and Technology Assessment
1. Definitions Related to Commercial Refrigeration Equipment
a. Air-Curtain Angle Definition
b. Door Angle Definition
c. Ice-Cream Freezer Definition
d. Equipment Configuration Definitions
e. Hybrid and Wedge Case Definitions
2. Equipment Classes
B. Engineering Analysis
1. Approach
2. Analytical Models
a. Cost Model
b. Energy Consumption Model
3. Equipment Classes Analyzed
4. Wedge Cases
5. Ice-Cream Freezers--Temperature Range
6. Special Application Temperature Cases
7. Coverage of Remote Condensing Units
8. Regulating Secondary Cooling Applications
C. Markups to Determine Equipment Price
D. Energy Use Characterization
E. Life-Cycle Cost and Payback Period Analyses
F. Shipments Analysis
G. National Impact Analysis
H. Life-Cycle Cost Sub-Group Analysis
I. Manufacturer Impact Analysis
J. Utility Impact Analysis
K. Employment Impact Analysis
L. Environmental Assessment
V. Discussion of Other Comments
A. Information and Assumptions Used in Analyses
1. Market and Technology Assessment
a. Data Sources
b. Beverage Merchandisers
2. Engineering Analysis
a. Design Options
b. Baseline Models
c. Consideration of Alternative Refrigerants
d. Consideration of NSF 7 Type II Equipment
e. Product Class Extension Factors
f. TSL Energy Limits
g. Compressor Selection Oversize Factor
h. Offset Factors for Self-Contained Equipment
i. Self-Contained Condensing Coils
3. Manufacturer Impact Analysis
VI. Analytical Results and Conclusions
A. Trial Standard Levels
1. Miscellaneous Equipment
B. Significance of Energy Savings
C. Economic Justification
1. Economic Impact on Commercial Customers
a. Life-Cycle Costs and Payback Period
b. Commercial Customer Sub-Group Analysis
2. Economic Impact on Manufacturers
a. Industry Cash-Flow Analysis Results
b. Cumulative Regulatory Burden
c. Impacts on Employment
d. Impacts on Manufacturing Capacity
e. Impacts on Manufacturers That Are Small Businesses
3. National Net Present Value and Net National Employment
4. Impact on Utility or Performance of Equipment
5. Impact of Any Lessening of Competition
6. Need of the Nation To Conserve Energy
7. Other Factors
D. Conclusion
VII. Procedural Issues and Regulatory Review
A. Review Under Executive Order 12866
B. Review Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act
C. Review Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
D. Review Under the National Environmental Policy Act
E. Review Under Executive Order 13132
F. Review Under Executive Order 12988
G. Review Under the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
H. Review Under the Treasury and General Government
Appropriations Act, 1999
I. Review Under Executive Order 12630
J. Review Under the Treasury and General Government
Appropriations Act, 2001
[[Page 1093]]
K. Review Under Executive Order 13211
L. Review Under the Information Quality Bulletin for Peer Review
M. Congressional Notification
VIII. Approval of the Office of the Secretary
I. Summary of the Final Rule and Its Benefits
A. The Standard Levels
The Energy Policy and Conservation Act, as amended (42 U.S.C. 6291
et seq.; EPCA), directs the Department of Energy (DOE) to establish
mandatory energy conservation standards for commercial ice-cream
freezers; self-contained commercial refrigerators, commercial freezers,
and commercial refrigerator-freezers without doors; and remote
condensing commercial refrigerators, commercial freezers, and
commercial refrigerator-freezers. (42 U.S.C. 6313(c)(4)(A)) These types
of equipment are referred to collectively hereafter as ``commercial
refrigeration equipment.'' Any such standard must be designed to
``achieve the maximum improvement in energy efficiency * * * which the
Secretary determines is technologically feasible and economically
justified.'' (42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(2)(A) and 6316(e)(1)) Furthermore, the
new standard must ``result in significant conservation of energy.'' (42
U.S.C. 6295(o)(3)(B) and 6316(e)(1)) The standards in today's final
rule, which apply to all commercial refrigeration equipment, satisfy
these requirements.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Currently, no mandatory Federal energy conservation
standards exist for the commercial refrigeration equipment covered
by this rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table I-1 shows the standard levels DOE is adopting today. These
standards will apply to all commercial refrigeration equipment
manufactured for sale in the United States, or imported to the United
States, on or after January 1, 2012.
Table I-1--Standard Levels for Commercial Refrigeration Equipment
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Equipment class \2\ Standard level * ** (kWh/day) *** Equipment class Standard level * ** (kWh/day)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
VOP.RC.M.............................. 0.82 x TDA + 4.07 VCT.RC.I................ 0.66 x TDA + 3.05
SVO.RC.M.............................. 0.83 x TDA + 3.18 HCT.RC.M................ 0.16 x TDA + 0.13
HZO.RC.M.............................. 0.35 x TDA + 2.88 HCT.RC.L................ 0.34 x TDA + 0.26
VOP.RC.L.............................. 2.27 x TDA + 6.85 HCT.RC.I................ 0.4 x TDA + 0.31
HZO.RC.L.............................. 0.57 x TDA + 6.88 VCS.RC.M................ 0.11 x V + 0.26
VCT.RC.M.............................. 0.22 x TDA + 1.95 VCS.RC.L................ 0.23 x V + 0.54
VCT.RC.L.............................. 0.56 x TDA + 2.61 VCS.RC.I................ 0.27 x V + 0.63
SOC.RC.M.............................. 0.51 x TDA + 0.11 HCS.RC.M................ 0.11 x V + 0.26
VOP.SC.M.............................. 1.74 x TDA + 4.71 HCS.RC.L................ 0.23 x V + 0.54
SVO.SC.M.............................. 1.73 x TDA + 4.59 HCS.RC.I................ 0.27 x V + 0.63
HZO.SC.M.............................. 0.77 x TDA + 5.55 SOC.RC.L................ 1.08 x TDA + 0.22
HZO.SC.L.............................. 1.92 x TDA + 7.08 SOC.RC.I................ 1.26 x TDA + 0.26
VCT.SC.I.............................. 0.67 x TDA + 3.29 VOP.SC.L................ 4.37 x TDA + 11.82
VCS.SC.I.............................. 0.38 x V + 0.88 VOP.SC.I................ 5.55 x TDA + 15.02
HCT.SC.I.............................. 0.56 x TDA + 0.43 SVO.SC.L................ 4.34 x TDA + 11.51
SVO.RC.L.............................. 2.27 x TDA + 6.85 SVO.SC.I................ 5.52 x TDA + 14.63
VOP.RC.I.............................. 2.89 x TDA + 8.7 HZO.SC.I................ 2.44 x TDA + 9.
SVO.RC.I.............................. 2.89 x TDA + 8.7 SOC.SC.I................ 1.76 x TDA + 0.36
HZO.RC.I.............................. 0.72 x TDA + 8.74 HCS.SC.I................ 0.38 x V + 0.88
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* TDA is the total display area of the case, as measured in the Air-Conditioning and Refrigeration Institute (ARI) Standard 1200-2006, Appendix D.
** V is the volume of the case, as measured in ARI Standard 1200-2006, Appendix C.
*** Kilowatt hours per day.
\2\ For this rulemaking, equipment class designations consist of a combination (in sequential order separated by periods) of: (1) An equipment family
code (VOP=vertical open, SVO=semivertical open, HZO=horizontal open, VCT=vertical transparent doors, VCS=vertical solid doors, HCT=horizontal
transparent doors, HCS=horizontal solid doors, or SOC=service over counter); (2) an operating mode code (RC=remote condensing or SC=self contained);
and (3) a rating temperature code (M=medium temperature (38 [deg]F), L=low temperature (0 [deg]F), or I=ice-cream temperature (-15 [deg]F)). For
example, ``VOP.RC.M'' refers to the ``vertical open, remote condensing, medium temperature'' equipment class. See discussion in section V.A.2 and
chapter 3 of the TSD, market and technology assessment, for a more detailed explanation of the equipment class terminology. See Table IV-2 for a list
of the equipment classes by category.
B. Benefits to Customers of Commercial Refrigeration Equipment
Table I-2 indicates the impacts on commercial customers of today's
standards.
Table I-2--Implications of New Standards for Commercial Consumers
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total
Total installed Life-cycle Payback
Equipment class Energy conservation installed cost cost period
standard cost ($) increase savings ($) (years)
($)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
VOP.RC.M........................... 0.82 x TDA + 4.07...... 8,065 536 1,788 2.0
VOP.RC.L........................... 2.27 x TDA + 6.85...... 11,222 1,947 3,938 2.8
VOP.SC.M........................... 1.74 x TDA + 4.71...... 4,381 633 1,549 2.4
[[Page 1094]]
VCT.RC.M........................... 0.22 x TDA + 1.95...... 11,654 2,134 2,339 3.9
VCT.RC.L........................... 0.56 x TDA + 2.61...... 12,584 2,513 5,419 2.6
VCT.SC.I........................... 0.67 x TDA + 3.29...... 6,602 1,385 5,217 1.7
VCS.SC.I........................... 0.38 x V + 0.88........ 4,227 326 1,757 1.3
SVO.RC.M........................... 0.83 x TDA + 3.18...... 7,470 435 1,274 1.9
SVO.SC.M........................... 1.73 x TDA + 4.59...... 3,719 439 1,136 2.3
SOC.RC.M........................... 0.51 x TDA + 0.11...... 12,740 240 945 1.7
HZO.RC.M........................... 0.35 x TDA + 2.88...... 8,133 248 1,040 1.6
HZO.RC.L........................... 0.57 x TDA + 6.88...... 8,194 270 1,102 1.6
HZO.SC.M........................... 0.77 x TDA + 5.55...... 3,398 313 826 2.3
HZO.SC.L........................... 1.92 x TDA + 7.08...... 3,836 460 1,761 1.7
HCT.SC.I........................... 0.56 x TDA + 0.43...... 2,478 238 785 1.9
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The economic impacts on commercial consumers (i.e., the average
life-cycle cost (LCC) savings) are positive for all equipment classes.
For example, currently available remote condensing vertical open
equipment operating at medium temperatures, semivertical equipment with
those same characteristics, and vertical closed equipment with
transparent doors and operating at low temperatures--three of the most
common types of commercial refrigeration equipment--typically have
installed prices of $8,065, $7,470 and $12,584, and annual energy costs
of $1,879, $1,413, and $2,249, respectively. To meet the new standards,
DOE estimates that the installed prices of such equipment will be
$8,601, $7,905, and $15,097, respectively, an increase of $536, $435,
and $2,513. This price increase will be offset by annual energy savings
of about $331, $234, and $977.
C. Impact on Manufacturers
Using a real corporate discount rate of 11.5 percent, DOE estimates
the industry net present value (INPV) of the commercial refrigeration
equipment industry to be $540 million in 2007$. DOE expects the impact
of today's standards on the industry net present value (INPV) of
manufacturers of commercial refrigeration equipment to be a loss of
7.29 to 27.35 percent (-$39 million to -$148 million). Based on DOE's
interviews with manufacturers of commercial refrigeration equipment,
DOE expects minimal plant closings or loss of employment as a result of
the standards.
D. National Benefits
DOE estimates the standards will save approximately 1.035 quads
(quadrillion (10\15\) British thermal units (Btu)) of energy over 30
years (2012-2042). This is equivalent to all the energy consumed by
more than 5 million American households in a single year.
By 2042, DOE expects the energy savings from the standards to
eliminate the need for approximately 0.7 new 1,000-megawatt (MW) power
plants. These energy savings will result in cumulative greenhouse gas
emission reductions of approximately 52.6 million tons (Mt) of carbon
dioxide (CO2), or an amount equal to that produced by
approximately 332,500 cars every year. Additionally, the standards will
help alleviate air pollution by resulting in between approximately 3.64
and 89.97 kilotons (kt) of cumulative nitrogen oxide (NOX)
emission reductions and between approximately 0 and 1.38 tons of
cumulative mercury emission reductions from 2012 through 2042. The
estimated net present values of these emissions reductions are between
$0 and $469 million for CO2, between $394,000 and $9.7
million for NOX, and between $0 and $284,000 for mercury at
a 7-percent discount rate in 2007$, discounted to 2008. At a 3-percent
discount rate, the estimated net present values of these emissions
reductions are between $0 and $955 million for CO2, between
$0.8 million and $20.5 million for NOX, and between $0 and
$560,000 for mercury.
The national NPV of the standards is $1.414 billion using a 7-
percent discount rate and $3.930 billion using a 3-percent discount
rate, cumulative from 2012 to 2062 in 2007$. This is the estimated
total value of future savings minus the estimated increased equipment
costs, discounted to 2008.
The benefits and costs of today's final rule can also be expressed
in terms of annualized [2007$] values between 2012 and 2042. Using a 7-
percent discount rate for the annualized cost analysis, the cost of the
standards established in today's final rule is $95 million per year in
increased equipment and installation costs, while the annualized
benefits are $229 million per year in reduced equipment operating
costs. Using a 3-percent discount rate, the cost of the standards
established in today's final rule is $81 million per year, while the
benefits of today's standards are $253 million per year.
II. Introduction
A. Authority
Title III of EPCA sets forth a variety of provisions designed to
improve energy efficiency. Part A of Title III (42 U.S.C. 6291-6309)
provides for the Energy Conservation Program for Consumer Products
Other than Automobiles. Part A-1 of Title III (42 U.S.C. 6311-6317)
establishes a similar program for ``Certain Industrial Equipment,''
including commercial refrigeration equipment, the subject of this
rulemaking.\3\ DOE publishes today's final rule pursuant to Part A-1 of
Title III, which provides for test procedures, labeling, and energy
conservation standards for commercial refrigeration equipment and
certain other equipment; and authorizes DOE to require information and
reports from manufacturers. The test procedure for commercial
refrigeration equipment appears in Title 10 Code of Federal Regulations
(CFR) part 431.64.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ This part was originally titled Part C. However, it was
redesignated Part A-1 after Part B of Title III of EPCA was repealed
by Public Law 109-58.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
EPCA provides criteria for prescribing new or amended standards for
commercial refrigeration equipment. As indicated above, any new or
amended standard for this equipment must be designed to achieve the
maximum improvement in energy efficiency that is technologically
feasible and
[[Page 1095]]
economically justified. (42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(2)(A) and 6316(e)(1))
Additionally, EPCA provides specific prohibitions on prescribing such
standards. DOE may not prescribe an amended or new standard for any
equipment for which DOE has not established a test procedure. (42
U.S.C. 6295(o)(3)(A) and 6316(e)(1)) Further, DOE may not prescribe an
amended or new standard if DOE determines by rule that such standard
would not result in ``significant conservation of energy'' or ``is not
technologically feasible or economically justified.'' (42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(3)(B) and 6316(e)(1))
EPCA also provides that in deciding whether such a standard is
economically justified for equipment such as commercial refrigeration
equipment, DOE must, after receiving comments on the proposed standard,
determine whether the benefits of the standard exceed its burdens by
considering, to the greatest extent practicable, the following seven
factors:
1. The economic impact of the standard on manufacturers and
consumers of the products subject to the standard;
2. The savings in operating costs throughout the estimated average
life of products in the type (or class) compared to any increase in the
price, initial charges, or maintenance expenses for the covered
products that are likely to result from the imposition of the standard;
3. The total projected amount of energy savings likely to result
directly from the imposition of the standard;
4. Any lessening of the utility or the performance of the products
likely to result from the imposition of the standard;
5. The impact of any lessening of competition, as determined in
writing by the Attorney General, that is likely to result from the
imposition of the standard;
6. The need for national energy conservation; and
7. Other factors the Secretary of Energy (Secretary) considers
relevant. (42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(2)(B)(i)-(ii) and 6316(e)(1))
In addition, EPCA, as amended (42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(2)(B)(iii) and
6316(e)(1)), establishes a rebuttable presumption that a standard for
commercial refrigeration equipment is economically justified if the
Secretary finds that ``the additional cost to the consumer of
purchasing a product complying with an energy conservation standard
level will be less than three times the value of the energy (and as
applicable, water) savings during the first year that the consumer will
receive as a result of the standard,'' as calculated under the test
procedure in place for that standard.
EPCA further provides that the Secretary may not prescribe an
amended or new standard if interested persons have established by a
preponderance of the evidence that the standard is ``likely to result
in the unavailability in the United States in any covered product type
(or class) of performance characteristics (including reliability),
features, sizes, capacities, and volumes that are substantially the
same as those generally available in the United States at the time of
the Secretary's finding.'' (42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(4) and 6316(e)(1))
Section 325(q)(1) of EPCA is applicable to promulgating standards
for most types or classes of equipment, including commercial
refrigeration equipment, that have two or more subcategories. (42
U.S.C. 6295(q)(1) and 42 U.S.C. 6316(e)(1)) Under this provision, DOE
must specify a different standard level than that which applies
generally to such type or class of equipment for any group of products
``which have the same function or intended use, if * * * products
within such group--(A) consume a different kind of energy from that
consumed by other covered products within such type (or class); or (B)
have a capacity or other performance-related feature which other
products within such type (or class) do not have and such feature
justifies a higher or lower standard'' than applies or will apply to
the other products. (42 U.S.C. 6295(q)(1)(A) and (B)) In determining
whether a performance-related feature justifies such a different
standard for a group of products, DOE must consider ``such factors as
the utility to the consumer of such a feature'' and other factors DOE
deems appropriate. (42 U.S.C. 6295(q)(1)) Any rule prescribing such a
standard must include an explanation of the basis on which DOE
established such a higher or lower level. (See 42 U.S.C. 6295(q)(2))
Federal energy conservation standards for commercial equipment
generally supersede State laws or regulations concerning energy
conservation testing, labeling, and standards. (42 U.S.C. 6297(a)-(c);
42 U.S.C. 6316(e)(2)-(3)) DOE can, however, grant waivers of preemption
for particular State laws or regulations, in accordance with the
procedures and other provisions of section 327(d) of the Act. (42
U.S.C. 6297(d); 42 U.S.C. 6316(e)(2)-(3))
B. Background
1. History of Standards Rulemaking for Commercial Refrigeration
Equipment
As discussed in the notice of proposed rulemaking, 73 FR 50072,
50076 (August 25, 2008) (the August 2008 NOPR), the EPACT 2005
amendments to EPCA require that DOE issue energy conservation standards
for the equipment covered by this rulemaking. (42 U.S.C. 6313(c)(4)(A))
The amendments also include definitions for terms relevant to this
equipment (42 U.S.C. 6311(9)). These definitions provide that
commercial refrigeration equipment is connected to either a self-
contained condensing unit or to a remote condensing unit (42 U.S.C.
6311(9)(A)(vii)), the two condenser configurations of equipment covered
by this rulemaking, and include definitions of a remote condensing unit
and self-contained condensing unit (42 U.S.C. 6311(9)(E)-(F)).
DOE commenced this rulemaking on April 25, 2006, by publishing a
notice of a public meeting and of the availability of its framework
document for the rulemaking. 71 FR 23876. The framework document
described the approaches DOE anticipated using and issues to be
resolved in the rulemaking. DOE held a public meeting on May 16, 2006,
to present the contents of the framework document, describe the
analyses DOE planned to conduct during the rulemaking, obtain public
comment on these subjects, and facilitate the public's involvement in
the rulemaking. DOE also allowed the submission of written statements,
after the public meeting, in response to the framework document.
On July 26, 2007, DOE published an advance notice of proposed
rulemaking (ANOPR) in this proceeding. 72 FR 41161 (the July 2007
ANOPR). In the July 2007 ANOPR, DOE sought comment on its proposed
equipment classes for the rulemaking, and on the analytical framework,
models, and tools that DOE used to analyze the impacts of energy
conservation standards for commercial refrigeration equipment. In
conjunction with the July 2007 ANOPR, DOE published on its Web site the
complete ANOPR TSD, which included the results of DOE's various
preliminary analyses in this rulemaking. In the July 2007 ANOPR, DOE
requested oral and written comments on these results and on a range of
other issues. DOE held a public meeting in Washington, DC, on August
23, 2007, to present the methodology and results of the ANOPR analyses
and to receive oral comments from those who attended. The oral and
written comments DOE received focused on DOE's assumptions, approach,
and equipment class breakdown, and were addressed in detail in the
August 2008 NOPR.
In the August 2008 NOPR, DOE proposed new energy conservation
[[Page 1096]]
standards for commercial refrigeration equipment. 73 FR 50072. In
conjunction with the August 2008 NOPR, DOE also published on its Web
site the complete technical support document (TSD) for the proposed
rule, which incorporated the final analyses DOE conducted and technical
documentation for each analysis. The TSD included the engineering
analysis spreadsheets, the LCC spreadsheet, and the national impact
analysis spreadsheet. The standards DOE proposed for commercial
refrigeration equipment are shown in Table II-1.
Table II-1--August 2008 Proposed Standard Levels for Commercial Refrigeration Equipment
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Equipment class Standard level* ** (kWh/day) Equipment class Standard level* ** (kWh/day)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
VOP.RC.M.............................. 0.82 x TDA + 4.07 VCT.RC.I................ 0.71 x TDA + 3.05
SVO.RC.M.............................. 0.83 x TDA + 3.18 HCT.RC.M................ 0.16 x TDA + 0.13
HZO.RC.M.............................. 0.35 x TDA + 2.88 HCT.RC.L................ 0.34 x TDA + 0.26
VOP.RC.L.............................. 2.28 x TDA + 6.85 HCT.RC.I................ 0.4 x TDA + 0.31
HZO.RC.L.............................. 0.57 x TDA + 6.88 VCS.RC.M................ 0.11 x V + 0.26
VCT.RC.M.............................. 0.25 x TDA + 1.95 VCS.RC.L................ 0.23 x V + 0.54
VCT.RC.L.............................. 0.6 x TDA + 2.61 VCS.RC.I................ 0.27 x V + 0.63
SOC.RC.M.............................. 0.51 x TDA + 0.11 HCS.RC.M................ 0.11 x V + 0.26
VOP.SC.M.............................. 1.74 x TDA + 4.71 HCS.RC.L................ 0.23 x V + 0.54
SVO.SC.M.............................. 1.73 x TDA + 4.59 HCS.RC.I................ 0.27 x V + 0.63
HZO.SC.M.............................. 0.77 x TDA + 5.55 SOC.RC.L................ 1.08 x TDA + 0.22
HZO.SC.L.............................. 1.92 x TDA + 7.08 SOC.RC.I................ 1.26 x TDA + 0.26
VCT.SC.I.............................. 0.73 x TDA + 3.29 VOP.SC.L................ 4.37 x TDA + 11.82
VCS.SC.I.............................. 0.38 x V + 0.88 VOP.SC.I................ 5.55 x TDA + 15.02
HCT.SC.I.............................. 0.56 x TDA + 0.43 SVO.SC.L................ 4.34 x TDA + 11.51
SVO.RC.L.............................. 2.28 x TDA + 6.85 SVO.SC.I................ 5.52 x TDA + 14.63
VOP.RC.I.............................. 2.9 x TDA + 8.7 HZO.SC.I................ 2.44 x TDA + 9
SVO.RC.I.............................. 2.9 x TDA + 8.7 SOC.SC.I................ 1.76 x TDA + 0.36
HZO.RC.I.............................. 0.72 x TDA + 8.74 HCS.SC.I................ 0.38 x V + 0.88
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* TDA is the total display area of the case, as measured in the ARI Standard 1200-2006, Appendix D.
** V is the volume of the case, as measured in ARI Standard 1200-2006, Appendix C.
In the August 2008 NOPR, DOE identified seven issues on which is
was particularly interested in receiving comments and views of
interested parties: Light-emitting diode (LED) price projections, base
case efficiency trends, operating temperature ranges, offset factors
for smaller equipment, extension of standards developed for the 15
primary classes to the remaining 23 secondary classes, standards for
hybrid cases and wedges, and standard levels. 73 FR 50134. After the
publication of the August 2008 NOPR, DOE received written comments on
these and other issues. DOE also held a public meeting in Washington,
DC, on September 23, 2008, to hear oral comments on and solicit
information relevant to the proposed rule. The August 2008 NOPR
included additional background information on the history of this
rulemaking. 73 FR 50076-77.
III. General Discussion
A. Test Procedures
On December 8, 2006, DOE published a final rule (the December 2006
final rule) in which it adopted American National Standards Institute
(ANSI)/Air-Conditioning and Refrigeration Institute (ARI) Standard
1200-2006, ``Performance Rating of Commercial Refrigerated Display
Merchandisers and Storage Cabinets,'' as the DOE test procedure for
this equipment.\4\ 71 FR 71340, 71369-70; 10 CFR 431.63-431.64. ARI
Standard 1200-2006 contains rating temperature specifications of 38
[deg]F (2 [deg]F) for commercial refrigerators and
refrigerator compartments, 0 [deg]F (2 [deg]F) for
commercial freezers and freezer compartments, and -5 [deg]F (2 [deg]F) for commercial ice-cream freezers. The standard also
requires performance tests to be conducted according to the ANSI/
American Society of Heating, Refrigerating, and Air-Conditioning
Engineers (ASHRAE) Standard 72-2005, ``Method of Testing Commercial
Refrigerators and Freezers.'' In the test procedure final rule, DOE
also adopted a -15 [deg]F (2 [deg]F) rating temperature for
commercial ice-cream freezers. 71 FR 71370. In addition, DOE adopted
ANSI/Association of Home Appliance Manufacturers (AHAM) Standard HRF-1-
2004, ``Energy, Performance and Capacity of Household Refrigerators,
Refrigerator-Freezers and Freezers,'' for determining compartment
volumes for this equipment. 71 FR 71369-70.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ The Air-Conditioning and Refrigeration Institute (ARI) and
the Gas Appliance Manufacturers Association (GAMA) announced on
December 17, 2007, that their members voted to approve the merger of
two trade associations to represent the interests of cooling,
heating, and commercial refrigeration equipment manufacturers. The
merged association became AHRI on January 1, 2008.
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B. Technological Feasibility
1. General
As stated above, any standards that DOE establishes for commercial
refrigeration equipment must be technologically feasible. (42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(2)(A) and (o)(3)(B); 42 U.S.C. 6316(e)(1)) DOE considers a
design option to be technologically feasible if it is in use by the
respective industry or if research has progressed to the development of
a working prototype. ``Technologies incorporated in commercial products
or in working prototypes will be considered technologically feasible.''
10 CFR part 430, subpart C, appendix A, section 4(a)(4)(i).
This final rule considers the same design options as those
evaluated in the August 2008 NOPR. (See chapter 4 of the final rule TSD
accompanying this notice.) All the evaluated technologies have been
used (or are being used) in commercially available products or working
prototypes. Therefore, DOE has determined that all of the efficiency
levels evaluated in this notice are technologically feasible.
2. Maximum Technologically Feasible Levels
As required by EPCA (42 U.S.C. 6295(p)(2) and 42 U.S.C. 6316(e)(1))
in developing the August 2008 NOPR, DOE identified the energy use
levels that
[[Page 1097]]
would achieve the maximum reductions in energy use that are
technologically feasible (max-tech levels) for commercial refrigeration
equipment. 73 FR at 50077-78. (See NOPR TSD chapter 5.) DOE received
comments indicating that LED efficacy had improved since the August
2008 NOPR. DOE also received comments regarding the LED lighting
configurations assumed in the engineering analysis for various
equipment types. This caused the max-tech levels proposed in the August
2008 NOPR to change for equipment classes with lighting. In general,
the max-tech levels for open equipment classes decreased and the max-
tech levels for closed cases increased from the max-tech levels
proposed in the August 2008 NOPR. For today's final rule, the max-tech
levels for all classes are the levels provided in Table III-1.
Table III-1--``Max-Tech'' Energy Use Levels
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Equipment class ``Max-tech'' level (kWh/day) Equipment class ``Max-tech'' level (kWh/day)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
VOP.RC.M.............................. 0.74 x TDA + 4.07 VCT.RC.I................ 0.66 x TDA + 3.05
SVO.RC.M.............................. 0.76 x TDA + 3.18 HCT.RC.M................ 0.16 x TDA + 0.13
HZO.RC.M.............................. 0.35 x TDA + 2.88 HCT.RC.L................ 0.34 x TDA + 0.26
VOP.RC.L.............................. 2.27 x TDA + 6.85 HCT.RC.I................ 0.4 x TDA + 0.31
HZO.RC.L.............................. 0.57 x TDA + 6.88 VCS.RC.M................ 0.11 x V + 0.26
VCT.RC.M.............................. 0.22 x TDA + 1.95 VCS.RC.L................ 0.23 x V + 0.54
VCT.RC.L.............................. 0.56 x TDA + 2.61 VCS.RC.I................ 0.27 x V + 0.63
SOC.RC.M.............................. 0.4 x TDA + 0.11 HCS.RC.M................ 0.11 x V + 0.26
VOP.SC.M.............................. 1.65 x TDA + 4.71 HCS.RC.L................ 0.23 x V + 0.54
SVO.SC.M.............................. 1.65 x TDA + 4.59 HCS.RC.I................ 0.27 x V + 0.63
HZO.SC.M.............................. 0.77 x TDA + 5.55 SOC.RC.L................ 0.84 x TDA + 0.22
HZO.SC.L.............................. 1.92 x TDA + 7.08 SOC.RC.I................ 0.99 x TDA + 0.26
VCT.SC.I.............................. 0.67 x TDA + 3.29 VOP.SC.L................ 4.14 x TDA + 11.82
VCS.SC.I.............................. 0.38 x V + 0.88 VOP.SC.I................ 5.26 x TDA + 15.02
HCT.SC.I.............................. 0.56 x TDA + 0.43 SVO.SC.L................ 4.15 x TDA + 11.51
SVO.RC.L.............................. 2.27 x TDA + 6.85 SVO.SC.I................ 5.27 x TDA + 14.63
VOP.RC.I.............................. 2.89 x TDA + 8.7 HZO.SC.I................ 2.44 x TDA + 9.
SVO.RC.I.............................. 2.89 x TDA + 8.7 SOC.SC.I................ 1.38 x TDA + 0.36
HZO.RC.I.............................. 0.72 x TDA + 8.74 HCS.SC.I................ 0.38 x V + 0.88
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Energy Savings
DOE forecasted energy savings in its national energy savings (NES)
analysis, through the use of an NES spreadsheet tool, as discussed in
the August 2008 NOPR. 73 FR at 50078, 50101-04, 50121.
One of the criteria that governs DOE's adoption of standards for
commercial refrigeration equipment is that the standard must result in
``significant conservation of energy.'' (42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(3)(B) and 42
U.S.C. 6316(e)(1)) While EPCA does not define the term ``significant,''
a U.S. Court of Appeals, in Natural Resources Defense Council v.
Herrington, 768 F.2d 1355, 1373 (DC Cir. 1985), indicated that Congress
intended ``significant'' energy savings in this context to be savings
that were not ``genuinely trivial.'' DOE's estimates of the energy
savings for energy conservation standards at each of the trial standard
levels (TSLs) in today's rule indicate that the energy savings each
would achieve are nontrivial. Therefore, DOE considers these savings
``significant'' within the meaning of section 325 of EPCA.
D. Economic Justification
1. Specific Criteria
As noted earlier, EPCA provides seven factors to evaluate in
determining whether an energy conservation standard for commercial
refrigeration equipment is economically justified. (42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(2)(B)(i) and 42 U.S.C. 6316(e)(1)) The following sections
discuss how DOE has addressed each of those seven factors in this
rulemaking.
a. Economic Impact on Commercial Customers and Manufacturers
DOE considered the economic impact of the new commercial
refrigeration equipment standards on commercial customers and
manufacturers. For customers, DOE measured the economic impact as the
change in installed cost and life-cycle operating costs, i.e., the LCC.
(See sections IV.E and VI.C.1.a, and chapter 8 of the TSD accompanying
this notice.) DOE investigated the impacts on manufacturers through the
manufacturer impact analysis (MIA). (See sections IV.I and VI.C.2, and
chapter 13 of the TSD accompanying this notice.) The economic impact on
commercial customers and manufacturers is discussed in detail in the
August 2008 NOPR. 73 FR at 50078-79, 50095-50100, 50104-07, 50013-16,
50117-21, 50130-31.
b. Life-Cycle Costs
DOE considered life-cycle costs of commercial refrigeration
equipment, as discussed in the August 2008 NOPR. 73 FR at 50078-79,
50095-50100, 50104, 50013-16, 50117-18. DOE calculated the sum of the
purchase price and the operating expense--discounted over the lifetime
of the equipment--to estimate the range in LCC benefits that commercial
consumers would expect to achieve due to the standards.
c. Energy Savings
Although significant conservation of energy is a separate statutory
requirement for imposing an energy conservation standard, EPCA also
requires DOE, in determining the economic justification of a proposed
standard, to consider the total projected energy savings that are
expected to result directly from the standard. (42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(2)(B)(i)(III) and 42 U.S.C. 6316(e)(1)) As in the August 2008
NOPR, 73 FR at 50078, 50101-04, 50121, for today's final rule DOE used
the NES spreadsheet results in its consideration of total projected
savings that are directly attributable to the standard levels DOE
considered.
d. Lessening of Utility or Performance of Equipment
In selecting today's standard levels, DOE sought to avoid new
standards for commercial refrigeration equipment that would lessen the
utility or performance of that equipment. (42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(2)(B)(i)(IV) and 42 U.S.C. 6316(e)(1)) 73 FR at 50079, 50088-
89, 50123.
[[Page 1098]]
e. Impact of Any Lessening of Competition
DOE considers any lessening of competition that is likely to result
from standards. Accordingly, as discussed in the August 2008 NOPR, 73
FR at 50079, 50123, DOE requested that the Attorney General transmit to
the Secretary a written determination of the impact, if any, of any
lessening of competition likely to result from the proposed standards,
together with an analysis of the nature and extent of such impact. (42
U.S.C. 6295(o)(2)(B)(i)(V) and (B)(ii) and 42 U.S.C. 6316(e)(1))
To assist the Attorney General in making such a determination, DOE
provided the Department of Justice (DOJ) with copies of the August 2008
proposed rule and the TSD for review. (DOJ, No. 37 at pp. 1-2) The
Attorney General's response is discussed in section VI.C.5 below, and
is reprinted at the end of this rule.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ A notation in the form ``DOJ, No. 37 at pp. 1-2'' identifies
a written comment that DOE has received and has included in the
docket of this rulemaking. This particular notation refers to (1) a
comment submitted by the Department of Justice (DOJ), (2) in
document number 37 in the docket of this rulemaking, and (3)
appearing on pages 1 and 2 of document number 37.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
f. Need of the Nation To Conserve Energy
In considering standards for commercial refrigeration equipment,
the Secretary must consider the need of the Nation to conserve energy.
(42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(2)(B)(i)(VI) and 42 U.S.C. 6316(e)(1)) The Secretary
recognizes that energy conservation benefits the Nation in several
important ways. The non-monetary benefits of the standards are likely
to be reflected in improvements to the security and reliability of the
Nation's energy system. Today's standards also will likely result in
environmental benefits. As discussed in the proposed rule, DOE has
considered these factors in adopting today's standards. 73 FR 50074,
50079, 50108, 50123-26, 50132.
g. Other Factors
EPCA directs the Secretary of Energy, in determining whether a
standard is economically justified, to consider any other factors that
the Secretary deems to be relevant. (42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(2)(B)(i)(VII)
and 42 U.S.C. 6316(e)(1)) In adopting today's standard, DOE considered
the LCC impacts on the commercial refrigeration equipment of
independent, small grocery/convenience store businesses. Compared to
the impact of standards on the overall market for commercial
refrigeration equipment, the impact of standards on these businesses
might be disproportionate because these businesses experience both
higher discount rates and lack of access to national account equipment
purchases. 73 FR 50079, 50104, 50117-18.
2. Rebuttable Presumption
Section 325(o)(2)(B)(iii) of EPCA states that there is a rebuttable
presumption that an energy conservation standard is economically
justified if the additional cost to the consumer of a product that
meets the standard level is less than three times the value of the
first-year energy (and as applicable water) savings resulting from the
standard, as calculated under the applicable DOE test procedure. (42
U.S.C. 6295(o)(2)(B)(iii) and 42 U.S.C. 6316(e)(1)) DOE's LCC and
payback period (PBP) analyses generate values that calculate the
payback period for consumers of potential energy conservation
standards, which includes, but is not limited to, the three-year
payback period contemplated under the rebuttable presumption test
discussed above. However, DOE routinely conducts a full economic
analysis that considers the full range of impacts, including those to
the consumer, manufacturer, Nation, and environment, as required under
42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(2)(B)(i) and 42 U.S.C. 6316(e)(1). The results of
this analysis serve as the basis for DOE to definitively evaluate the
economic justification for a potential standard level (thereby
supporting or rebutting the results of any preliminary determination of
economic justification).
IV. Methodology and Discussion of Comments on Methodology
DOE used several analytical tools that it developed previously and
adapted for use in this rulemaking. One is a spreadsheet that
calculates LCC and PBP. Another tool calculates national energy savings
and national NPV. DOE also used the Government Regulatory Impact Model
(GRIM), along with other methods, in its MIA. Finally, DOE developed an
approach using the National Energy Modeling System (NEMS) to estimate
impacts of energy efficiency standards for commercial refrigeration
equipment on electric utilities and the environment. The TSD appendices
discuss each of these analytical tools in detail. 73 FR 50079-108.
As a basis for this final rule, DOE has continued to use the
spreadsheets and approaches explained in the August 2008 NOPR. DOE used
the same general methodology as applied in the August 2008 NOPR, but
revised some of the assumptions and inputs for the final rule in
response to stakeholder comments. The following paragraphs discuss
these revisions.
A. Market and Technology Assessment
When beginning an energy conservation standards rulemaking, DOE
develops information that provides an overall picture of the market for
the equipment concerned, including the purpose of the equipment, the
industry structure, and market characteristics. This activity includes
both quantitative and qualitative assessments based primarily on
publicly available information. DOE presented various subjects in the
market and technology assessment for this rulemaking. (See the August
2008 NOPR and chapter 3 of the NOPR TSD.) These include equipment
definitions, equipment classes, manufacturers, quantities and types of
equipment sold and offered for sale, retail market trends, and
regulatory and nonregulatory programs.
1. Definitions Related to Commercial Refrigeration Equipment
a. Air-Curtain Angle Definition
For equipment without doors, an air curtain divides the
refrigerated compartment from the ambient space. DOE proposed the
following definition of air-curtain angle in the August 2008 NOPR that
is consistent with the industry-approved standards: ``Air-curtain angle
means: (1) For equipment without doors and without a discharge air
grille or discharge air honeycomb, the angle between a vertical line
extended down from the highest point on the manufacturer's recommended
load limit line and the load limit line itself, when the equipment is
viewed in cross-section; and (2) For all other equipment without doors,
the angle formed between a vertical line and the straight line drawn by
connecting the point at the inside edge of the discharge air opening
with the point at the inside edge of the return air opening, when the
equipment is viewed in cross-section.'' 73 FR 50080; 50135. DOE did not
receive any additional comments on the definition of air-curtain angle
in response to the August 2008 NOPR; thus, DOE is adopting these
definitions as proposed.
b. Door Angle Definition
The door orientation affects the energy consumption of equipment
with doors. This equipment can be broadly categorized by the angle of
the door. In the August 2008 NOPR, DOE proposed the following
definition of door angle: ``(1) For equipment with flat doors, the
angle between a vertical line and the
[[Page 1099]]
line formed by the plane of the door, when the equipment is viewed in
cross-section; and (2) For equipment with curved doors, the angle
formed between a vertical line and the straight line drawn by
connecting the top and bottom points where the display area glass joins
the cabinet, when the equipment is viewed in cross-section.'' 73 FR
50080; 50135. DOE did not receive any additional comments on the
definition of door angle in response to the August 2008 NOPR; thus, DOE
is adopting the definition as proposed.
c. Ice-Cream Freezer Definition
During the NOPR public meeting, interested parties expressed
concern about the definition of an ``ice-cream freezer'' as used in
this rulemaking. Hussman stated that using the term ``ice cream'' to
refer to a temperature range might be confusing because ice cream is
also a product. (Hussman, Public Meeting Transcript, No. 27 at p. 15)
\6\ Southern Store Fixtures expressed a similar concern, adding that
other types of frozen items, such as frozen juice, may be displayed in
ice-cream type cases. (Southern Store Fixtures, Public Meeting
Transcript, No. 27 at p. 18)
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\6\ A notation in the form ``Hussman, Public Meeting Transcript,
No. 27 at p. 15'' identifies an oral comment that DOE received
during the September 23, 2008, NOPR public meeting. This comment was
recorded in the public meeting transcript in the docket for this
rulemaking (Docket No. EE-2006-STD-0126), maintained in the Resource
Room of the Building Technologies Program. This particular notation
refers to a comment (1) made during the public meeting by Hussman;
(2) recorded in document number 27, which is the public meeting
transcript filed in the docket of this rulemaking; and (3) appearing
on page 15 of document number 27.
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As described in the July 2007 ANOPR, the EPCA provision that
required this rulemaking identifies specifically the categories ``ice-
cream freezers,'' ``self-contained commercial refrigerators, freezers,
and refrigerator-freezers without doors,'' and ``remote condensing
commercial refrigerators, freezers, and refrigerator-freezers.'' (42
U.S.C. 6313(c)(4)(A), added by EPACT 2005, section 136(c)) Because the
term ``ice-cream freezers'' was specified in EPCA, the term ``ice
cream'' is appropriate to describe that specific equipment category in
this rulemaking, and DOE is therefore maintaining the use of that term
in the rulemaking. Also, see section IV.A.2 of this final rule.
d. Equipment Configuration Definitions
The configuration of commercial refrigeration equipment affects its
energy consumption and the equipment classes into which this equipment
is divided. In the August 2008 NOPR, DOE proposed five definitions of
equipment configurations, shown in Table IV-1. 73 FR 50081; 50135.
Table IV-1--Equipment Configuration Definitions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Equipment family Description
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vertical Open (VOP)......................................... Equipment without doors and an air-curtain angle
>=0 degrees and <10 degrees from the vertical.
Semivertical Open (SVO)..................................... Equipment without doors and an air-curtain angle
>=10 degrees and <80 degrees from the vertical.
Horizontal Open (HZO)....................................... Equipment without doors and an air-curtain angle
>=80 degrees from the vertical.
Vertical Closed (VC)........................................ Equipment with hinged or sliding doors and a door
angle <45 degrees.
Horizontal Closed (HC)...................................... Equipment with hinged or sliding doors and a door
angle >=45 degrees.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DOE did not receive any additional comments on the definitions of
the five configurations; thus, DOE is adopting these definitions as
proposed.
e. Hybrid and Wedge Case Definitions
As stated in the August 2008 NOPR, certain types of equipment meet
the definition of ``commercial refrigeration equipment'' (Section
136(a)(3) of EPACT 2005), but do not fall directly into any of the 38
equipment classes defined in the market and technology assessment.
Among these types are hybrid cases and wedge cases; DOE proposed
definitions for these in the August 2008 NOPR. Because DOE did not
receive any additional comments on the definitions of ``commercial
hybrid refrigerators, freezers, and refrigerator-freezers'' or on the
definition of ``wedge case,'' DOE is adopting these definitions as
proposed in section 431.62.
2. Equipment Classes
Commercial refrigerators, commercial freezers, and commercial
refrigerator-freezers can be divided into various equipment classes
categorized largely by physical characteristics that affect energy
efficiency. Some of these characteristics delineate the categories of
equipment covered by this rulemaking.\7\ Most affect the merchandise
that the equipment can be used to display and how the customer can
access that merchandise. Key physical characteristics that affect
energy efficiency are the operating temperature, the presence or
absence of doors (i.e., closed cases or open cases), the type of doors
used (i.e., transparent or solid), the angle of the door or air-curtain
(i.e., horizontal, semivertical, or vertical), and the type of
condensing unit (i.e., remote or self-contained). As discussed in the
August 2008 NOPR, 73 FR 50080-83, DOE is adopting equipment classes in
this rulemaking by: (1) Dividing commercial refrigerators, commercial
freezers, and commercial refrigerator-freezers into equipment families;
(2) subdividing these families based on condensing unit configurations
and rating temperature designations; and (3) identifying the resulting
classes that are within each of the three equipment categories covered
by this rulemaking. Because DOE did not receive any comments in
response to the presentation of equipment classes in the August 2008
NOPR, DOE is adopting the equipment classes as proposed without further
modification. Table IV-2 presents the equipment classes covered under
this rulemaking, organized by the three equipment categories.
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\7\ ``Commercial refrigerators, commercial freezers, and
commercial refrigerator-freezers'' is a type of covered commercial
equipment. For purposes of discussion only in this proceeding, DOE
uses the term ``categories'' to designate groupings of ``commercial
refrigeration equipment.'' The categories of equipment are: Self-
contained commercial refrigerators, commercial freezers, and
commercial refrigerator-freezers without doors; remote condensing
commercial refrigerators, commercial freezers, and commercial
refrigerator-freezers; and commercial ice-cream freezers. DOE will
analyze specific equipment classes that fall within these general
categories and set appropriate standards.
[[Page 1100]]
Table IV-2--Commercial Refrigeration Equipment Classes by Category
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Operating
Equipment category Condensing unit Equipment family temperature Equipment class
configuration ([deg]F) designation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Remote Condensing Commercial Remote.............. Vertical Open....... >=32 VOP.RC.M
Refrigerators, Commercial <32 VOP.RC.L
Freezers, and Commercial
Refrigerator-Freezers.
Semivertical Open... >=32 SVO.RC.M
<32 SVO.RC.L
Horizontal Open..... >=32 HZO.RC.M
<32 HZO.RC.L
Vertical Closed >=32 VCT.RC.M
Transparent. <32 VCT.RC.L
Horizontal Closed >=32 HCT.RC.M
Transparent. <32 HCT.RC.L
Vertical Closed >=32 VCS.RC.M
Solid. <32 VCS.RC.L
Horizontal Closed >=32 HCS.RC.M
Solid. <32 HCS.RC.L
Service Over Counter >=32 SOC.RC.M
<32 SOC.RC.L
Self-Contained Commercial Self-Contained...... Vertical Open....... >=32 VOP.SC.M
Refrigerators, Commercial <32 VOP.SC.L
Freezers, and Commercial
Refrigerator-Freezers without
Doors.
Semivertical Open... >=32 SVO.SC.M
<32 SVO.SC.L
Horizontal Open..... >=32 HZO.SC.M
<32 HZO.SC.L
Commercial Ice-Cream Freezers.... Remote.............. Vertical Open....... * <=-5 VOP.RC.I
Semivertical Open... ........... SVO.RC.I
Horizontal Open..... ........... HZO.RC.I
Vertical Closed ........... VCT.RC.I
Transparent.
Horizontal Closed ........... HCT.RC.I
Transparent.
Vertical Closed ........... VCS.RC.I
Solid.
Horizontal Closed ........... HCS.RC.I
Solid.
Service Over Counter ........... SOC.RC.I
Self-Contained...... Vertical Open....... ........... VOP.SC.I
Semivertical Open... ........... SVO.SC.I
Horizontal Open..... ........... HZO.SC.I
Vertical Closed ........... VCT.SC.I
Transparent.
Horizontal Closed ........... HCT.SC.I
Transparent.
Vertical Closed ........... VCS.SC.I
Solid.
Horizontal Clo