Energy Conservation Program for Appliance Standards: Energy Conservation Standards for Residential Furnaces and Commercial Water Heaters, 33011-33022 [2019-14553]
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33011
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
Vol. 84, No. 133
Thursday, July 11, 2019
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains notices to the public of the proposed
issuance of rules and regulations. The
purpose of these notices is to give interested
persons an opportunity to participate in the
rule making prior to the adoption of the final
rules.
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
10 CFR Parts 430 and 431
Energy Conservation Program for
Appliance Standards: Energy
Conservation Standards for
Residential Furnaces and Commercial
Water Heaters
Office of Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy, U.S. Department of
Energy.
ACTION: Granting in part and denying in
part a petition for rulemaking; notice of
proposed interpretive rule; request for
comment.
AGENCY:
This document responds to
the petition for rulemaking submitted
on October 18, 2018 (Gas Industry
Petition), by a number of parties asking
the Department of Energy (DOE) to issue
an interpretive rule and to withdraw
related, previously published proposals.
The Gas Industry Petition was
published in the Federal Register on
November 1, 2018, for public review
and input. After carefully considering
the public comments on the petition,
DOE has decided to grant the request for
an interpretive rule. DOE has not made,
and does not presently propose, any
changes or revisions to current policies,
legal requirements, or rulemakings with
respect to condensing and noncondensing products/equipment.
Decisions about whether and how this
interpretation of the term ‘‘feature’’ in
the context of condensing/noncondensing products/equipment will
apply to existing rulemakings will be
the subject of subsequent actions. Thus,
DOE is denying the Gas Industry
Petitioners’ request to withdraw its
earlier proposed rules for residential
furnaces and commercial water heaters.
DATES: Written comments and
information are requested on or before
September 9, 2019.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are
encouraged to submit comments,
identified by ‘‘Energy Conservation
Standards for Residential Furnaces and
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SUMMARY:
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Commercial Water Heaters,’’ by any of
the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
Email: ResFurnaceCommWaterHeater
2018STD0018@ee.doe.gov. Include
Docket No. EERE–2018–BT–STD–0018
in the subject line of the message.
Submit electronic comments in
WordPerfect, Microsoft Word, PDF, or
ASCII file format, and avoid the use of
special characters or any form of
encryption.
Postal Mail: Appliance and
Equipment Standards Program, U.S.
Department of Energy, Building
Technologies Office, Mailstop EE–5B,
1000 Independence Avenue SW,
Washington, DC 20585–0121. If
possible, please submit all items on a
compact disc (CD), in which case it is
not necessary to include printed copies.
Hand Delivery/Courier: Appliance
and Equipment Standards Program, U.S.
Department of Energy, Building
Technologies Office, 950 L’Enfant Plaza
SW, Suite 600, Washington, DC 20024.
Telephone: (202) 287–1445. If possible,
please submit all items on a CD, in
which case it is not necessary to include
printed copies.
No telefacsimilies (faxes) will be
accepted. For detailed instructions on
submitting comments and additional
information, see section VI of this
document (Public Participation).
Docket: For access to the docket to
read background documents, or
comments received, go to the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at: https://
www.regulations.gov/docket?D=EERE2018-BT-STD-0018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Sofie Miller, Senior Advisor, U.S.
Department of Energy, Office of Energy
Efficiency and Renewable Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue SW, Washington,
DC 20585. Telephone: (202) 586–5000.
Email: Sofie.Miller@ee.doe.gov.
Mr. Eris Stas, U.S. Department of
Energy, Office of the General Counsel,
1000 Independence Avenue SW,
Washington, DC 20585. Telephone:
(202) 586–5827. Email: Eric.Stas@
hq.doe.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background
II. Summary Description
A. Relevant Statutory Provisions
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B. DOE’s Historical Interpretation
C. The Gas Industry Petition
III. Response to Comments
A. Legal Authority
1. Legal Authority To Set Separate
Product/Equipment Classes Based Upon
Condensing and Non-Condensing
Technologies
2. Legal Authority To Set a ‘‘Small’’
Furnaces Product Class for Mobile Home
Furnaces
B. Fuel Switching
C. Analytical Issues
D. Market Trends
E. Consumer Impacts
F. Other Issues
IV. DOE’s Proposed Revised Interpretation
V. Conclusion
VI. Public Participation
VII. Approval of the Office of the Secretary
I. Background
The Department sought public
comments on the petition for
rulemaking submitted on October 18,
2018, by the American Public Gas
Association (APGA), Spire, Inc., the
Natural Gas Supply Association
(NGSA), the American Gas Association
(AGA), and the National Propane Gas
Association (NPGA), collectively
referred to as the ‘‘Gas Industry
Petitioners,’’ asking DOE to: (1) Issue an
interpretive rule stating that DOE’s
proposed energy conservation standards
for residential furnaces and commercial
water heaters would result in the
unavailability of ‘‘performance
characteristics’’ within the meaning of
the Energy Policy and Conservation Act
of 1975 1 (EPCA; 42 U.S.C. 6291 et seq.),
as amended (i.e., by setting standards
which can only be met by condensing
combustion technology products/
equipment and thereby precluding the
distribution in commerce of noncondensing combustion technology
products/equipment) and (2) withdraw
the proposed energy conservation
standards for residential furnaces 2 and
commercial water heaters 3 based upon
1 All references to EPCA in this document refer
to the statute as amended through America’s Water
Infrastructure Act of 2018, Public Law 115–270
(Oct. 23, 2018).
2 Standards for non-weatherized residential
furnaces were published in a notice of proposed
rulemaking at 80 FR 13120 (March 12, 2015)
(Docket No. EERE–2014–BT–STD–0031–0032) and
in a supplemental notice of proposed rulemaking at
81 FR 65720 (Sept. 23, 2016) (Docket No. EERE–
2014–BT–STD–0031–0230).
3 Standards for commercial water heating
equipment were published in a notice of proposed
rulemaking at 81 FR 34440 (May 31, 2016) (Docket
No. EERE–2014–BT–STD–0042).
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such findings. DOE published the
petition in the Federal Register on
November 1, 2018 (83 FR 54883), which
had a comment period scheduled to
close on January 30, 2019. DOE received
two requests from interested parties
seeking an extension of the comment
period in order to develop additional
data relevant to the petition. DOE
granted those requests through
publication in the Federal Register of a
document extending the comment
period on the notice of petition for
rulemaking until March 1, 2019. 84 FR
449 (Jan. 29, 2019).
The 90-day public comment period,
including the 30-day extension to
submit comments, invited public input
in order to better understand
stakeholder perspectives and increase
transparency around a complex issue
involving DOE’s legal authority. DOE
received comments from a variety of
stakeholders, including representatives
from gas industry associations, the
manufactured housing industry,
efficiency advocates, consumer
advocates, State organizations and
Attorneys General, and individuals
(mostly form letter comments). In
general, the gas industry associations
and the manufactured housing industry
supported the petition, and the
advocates and State officials opposed it.
Specifically, DOE received comment on
the notice of petition from:
• Air-Conditioning, Heating &
Refrigeration Institute (AHRI);
• A.O. Smith Corporation (A.O.
Smith);
• Appliance Standards Awareness
Project (ASAP)/American Council for an
Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE)/
Alliance to Save Energy (ASE)/
Consumer Federation of America (CFA)/
National Consumer Law Center (NCLC)
(ASAP et al. Joint Comment);
• California Energy Commission
(CEC);
• Center for Efficient Living (CEL);
• EarthJustice/National Resources
Defense Council (EarthJustice/NRCD
Joint Comment);
• Emissol LLC;
• Indiana Manufactured Housing
Association/Recreation Vehicle Indiana
Council (IMHA/RVIC Joint Comment);
• Manufactured Housing Industry of
Arizona (MHIA);
• Manufactured Housing Institute
(MHI);
• Manufactured & Modular Home
Association of Minnesota (MMHAM);
• Mississippi Manufactured Housing
Association (MMHA);
• Mitsubishi Electric US (Mitsubishi);
• Mortex Products, Inc. (Mortex);
• National Consumer Law Center/
Consumer Federation of America
(NCLC/CFA Joint Comment);
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• National Electrical Manufacturers
Association (NEMA);
• National Multifamily Housing
Council/National Apartment
Association/National Leased Housing
Association (NMHC/NAA/NLHA Joint
Comment);
• Natural Resources Defense Council
(NRDC);
• New Mexico Manufactured Housing
Association (NMMHA);
• Nortek Global HVAC (Nortek);
• Northeast Energy Efficiency
Partnerships (NEEP);
• Northwest Energy Efficiency
Alliance (NEEA);
• Northwest Energy Efficiency
Alliance/Northeast Energy Efficiency
Partnership/Pacific Gas and Electric/
National Grid (NEEA/NEEP/PG&E/
National Grid Joint Comment);
• Oliver Technologies, Inc.;
• Pacific Gas and Electric Company
(PG&E)/San Diego Gas and Electric
(SDG&E)/Southern California Edison
(SCE) (CA IOUs Joint Comment);
• Plumbing-Heating-Cooling
Contractors Association (PHCC);
• Rheem Manufacturing Company
(Rheem);
• Southern Company;
• Spire Inc./American Public Gas
Association (APGA)/American Gas
Association (AGA)/National Propane
Gas Association (NPGA)/Natural Gas
Supply Association (NGSA) (Gas
Industry Petitioners Joint Comment);
• State Attorneys General (of NY, DC,
IL, ME, MA, MN, NJ, OR, VT, and WA)
and Corporation Counsel of New York
City (Multi-State AGs Joint Comment);
• Suburban Propane;
• Triple-T;
• VEIC;
• Weil-McLain;
• Wisconsin Housing Alliance
(WHA), and
• 22 individuals.
The comments were carefully and
fully considered by DOE. DOE is issuing
this notice of proposed interpretive rule
to provide the public additional
information about DOE’s interpretation
of EPCA’s ‘‘features’’ provision 4 in the
context of condensing vs. noncondensing furnaces and water heaters,
as informed by public comments. The
following sections of this document set
forth the relevant legal authority,
describe the Department’s historical
interpretation of EPCA’s ‘‘features’’
provision as applied to condensing vs.
non-condensing products/equipment,
provide summary responses to
significant and recurring comments
received through the public comment
4 See 42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(4); 42 U.S.C.
6313(a)(6)(B)(iii)(II)(aa); 6316(a).
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process, and propose an interpretation
of the relevant statutory provision.
This proposed interpretive rule does
not change or revise any current policies
or legal requirements with respect to
residential furnaces and commercial
water heaters. Decisions about whether
and how this interpretation will apply
to existing products/equipment utilizing
condensing/non-condensing technology
will be the subject of subsequent
actions.
II. Summary Description
A. Relevant Statutory Provisions
In this document, DOE explains its
historical interpretation regarding the
evaluation of what constitutes a product
‘‘feature’’ which cannot be eliminated
under EPCA, specifically in the context
of residential furnaces and commercial
water heaters. For covered consumer
products, the key statutory provision at
issue can be found at 42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(4), which provides that the
Secretary may not prescribe an amended
or new standard under this section if the
Secretary finds (and publishes such
finding) that 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.
Where the Secretary finds such
‘‘performance characteristics (including
reliability), features, sizes, capacities,
and volumes’’ (collectively referred to
hereafter as ‘‘features’’) to exist, the
statute provides a potential remedy at
42 U.S.C. 6295(q)(1), which provides
that a rule prescribing an energy
conservation standard for a type (or
class) of covered products shall specify
a level of energy use or efficiency higher
or lower than that which applies (or
would apply) for such type (or class) for
any group of covered products which
have the same function or intended use,
if the Secretary determines that covered
products within such group—(A)
consume a different kind of energy from
that consumed by other covered
products within such group (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 from that
which applies (or will apply) to other
products within such type (or class). In
making a determination under 42 U.S.C.
6295(q)(1) concerning whether a
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performance-related feature justifies the
establishment of a higher or lower
standard, the Secretary shall consider
such factors as the utility to the
consumer of such a feature, and such
other factors as the Secretary deems
appropriate.
These provisions also apply to
covered non-ASHRAE commercial and
industrial equipment through the
provision at 42 U.S.C. 6316(a). (Under
the statute, ‘‘ASHRAE equipment’’
refers to small commercial package air
conditioning and heating equipment,
large commercial package air
conditioning and heating equipment,
very large commercial package air
conditioning and heating equipment,
packaged terminal air conditioners,
packaged terminal heat pumps, warmair furnaces, packaged boilers, storage
water heaters, instantaneous water
heaters, or unfired hot water storage
tanks, which are addressed by the
ASHRAE in Standard 90.1, Energy
Standard for Buildings Except Low-Rise
Residential Buildings.)
ASHRAE equipment has its own
separate statutory scheme under EPCA,
with the default situation being that
DOE must adopt the level set forth in
ASHRAE Standard 90.1 unless the
Department has clear and convincing
evidence to adopt a more-stringent
standard (see 42 U.S.C. 6313(a)(6)).
Under 42 U.S.C. 6313(a)(6)(B)(iii)(II)(aa),
there is a similar ‘‘features’’ provision
which provides that the Secretary may
not prescribe an amended standard
under the subparagraph if the Secretary
finds (and publishes the finding) that
interested persons have established by a
preponderance of the evidence that a
standard is likely to result in the
unavailability in the United States in
any 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 finding
of the Secretary. However, it is noted
that this provision contains the specific
limitation that it applies to an amended
standard prescribed under this
subparagraph (i.e., when DOE is acting
under its authority to set a morestringent standard). There is no
companion ‘‘features’’ provision under
42 U.S.C. 6313(a)(6)(A), which is the
provision that would apply when DOE
is adopting the levels set by ASHRAE.
Congress was clearly aware of the
features issue, and it chose to act in the
context of DOE standard setting, but not
ASHRAE standard setting. There is
likewise no companion provision to 42
U.S.C. 6295(q)(1) for ASHRAE
equipment.
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B. DOE’s Historical Interpretation
With this statutory background in
mind, in the March 12, 2015, notice of
proposed rulemaking (NOPR) for energy
conservation standards for residential
furnaces, DOE set forth in detail its
rationale for why it did not considering
the venting of non-condensing furnaces
to constitute a product ‘‘feature’’ under
42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(4). 80 FR 13120,
13137–13138.
As discussed previously, when
evaluating and establishing energy
conservation standards, the statute
requires DOE to divide covered
products into product classes by the
type of energy used, by capacity, or by
other performance-related features that
justify a different standard. In making a
determination whether a performancerelated feature justifies a different
standard, DOE must consider factors
such as the utility to the consumer of
the feature and other factors DOE
determines are appropriate. (42 U.S.C.
6295(q)) Historically, DOE has viewed
utility as an aspect of the product that
is accessible to the layperson and is
based on user operation, rather than
performing a theoretical function. This
interpretation has been implemented
consistently in DOE’s previous
rulemakings by determining utility
through the value the item brings to the
consumer, rather than through
analyzing more complicated design
features, or costs that anyone, including
the consumer, manufacturer, installer,
or utility companies may bear. DOE
reasoned that this approach is
consistent with EPCA requiring a
separate and extensive analysis of
economic justification for the adoption
of any new or amended energy
conservation standard (see 42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(2)(A)–(B) and (3)).
Under EPCA, DOE has typically
addressed consumer utility by
establishing separate product classes or
otherwise taken action when a
consumer may value a product feature
based on the consumer’s everyday
needs. For instance, DOE has
determined that it would be
impermissible under 42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(4) to include elimination of
oven door windows as a technology
option to improve the energy efficiency
of cooking products.5 DOE reached this
conclusion based upon how consumers
typically use the product: Peering
through the oven window to judge if an
item is finished cooking, as opposed to
checking the timer and/or indicator
light or simply opening the oven door
to see if the item is finished cooking.
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5 63
FR 48038, 48041 (Sept. 8, 1998).
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DOE has also determined that
consumers may value other qualities
such as ability to self-clean,6 size,7 and
configuration.8 This determination,
however, can change depending on the
technology and the consumer, and it is
conceivable that certain products may
disappear from the market entirely due
to shifting consumer demand. DOE
stated that it has determined such value
on a case-by-case basis through its own
research, as well as public comments
received.
DOE offered a cautionary note that
disparate products may have very
different consumer utilities, thereby
making direct comparisons difficult and
potentially misleading. For instance, in
a 2011 rulemaking, DOE created
separate product classes for vented and
ventless residential clothes dryers based
on DOE’s recognition of the ‘‘unique
utility’’ that ventless clothes dryers offer
to consumers. 76 FR 22454, 22485
(April 21, 2011). This utility could be
characterized as the ability to have a
clothes dryer in a living area where
vents are impossible to install (i.e., an
apartment in a high-rise building). As
explained in that April 2011 direct final
rule technical support document,
ventless dryers can be installed in
locations where venting dryers would
be precluded due to venting restrictions.
But in another rulemaking, DOE
found that water heaters that utilize heat
pump technology did not need to be put
in a separate product class from
conventional types of hot water heaters
that utilize electric resistance
technology, even though water heaters
utilizing heat pumps require the
additional installation of a condensate
drain that a hot water heater utilizing
electric resistance technology does not
require. 74 FR 65852, 65871 (Dec. 11,
2009). DOE found that regardless of
these installation factors, the heat pump
water heater and the conventional water
heater still had the same utility to the
consumer: Providing hot water. Id. In
both cases, DOE made its finding based
on consumer type and utility type,
rather than product design criteria that
impact product efficiency. These
distinctions in both the consumer type
and the utility type are important
because, taken to the extreme, each
design differential could be designated
a different ‘‘product class’’ and,
6 73 FR 62034, 62048 (Oct. 17, 2008) (separating
standard ovens and self-cleaning ovens into
different product classes).
7 77 FR 32307, 32319 (May 31, 2012) (creating a
separate product class for compact front-loading
residential clothes washers).
8 75 FR 59469, 59487 (Sept. 27, 2010) (creating a
separate product class for refrigerators with bottommounted freezers).
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therefore, require different energy
conservation standards.
DOE expressed concern that tying the
concept of ‘‘feature’’ to a specific
technology would effectively lock-in the
currently existing technology as the
ceiling for product efficiency and
eliminate DOE’s ability to address
technological advances that could yield
significant consumer benefits in the
form of lower energy costs while
providing the same functionality for the
consumer. DOE stated that it was very
concerned that determining features
solely on product technology could
undermine the Department’s Appliance
Standards Program. DOE reasoned that
if it is required to maintain separate
product classes to preserve less-efficient
technologies, future advancements in
the energy efficiency of covered
products would become largely
voluntary, an outcome which seems
inimical to Congress’s purposes and
goals in enacting EPCA.
Turning to the product at issue in that
rulemaking, DOE noted that residential
furnaces are currently divided into
several product classes. For example,
furnaces are separated into product
classes based on their fuel source (gas,
oil, or electricity), which is required by
statute. For that rulemaking, DOE
analyzed only two product classes for
residential furnaces: (1) Nonweatherized gas-fired furnaces (NWGFs)
and (2) mobile home gas-fired furnaces
(MHGFs). DOE did not additionally
separate NWGFs and MHGFs into
condensing and noncondensing product
classes.
In that rulemaking, DOE tentatively
concluded that the methods by which a
furnace is vented did not provide any
separate performance-related impacts,
and, therefore, DOE had no statutory
basis for defining a separate class based
on venting and drainage characteristics.
DOE reasoned that NWGF and MHGF
venting methods did not provide unique
utility to consumers beyond the basic
function of providing heat, which all
furnaces perform. The possibility that
installing a non-condensing furnace
may be less costly than a condensing
furnace due to the difference in venting
methods did not justify separating the
two types of NWGFs into different
product classes. Unlike the consumers
of ventless dryers, which DOE had
determined to be a performance-related
feature based on the impossibility of
venting in certain circumstances (e.g.,
high-rise apartments), DOE reasoned
that consumers of condensing NWGFs
are homeowners that may either use
their existing venting or have a feasible
alternative to obtain heat. In other
words, homeowners would still be able
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to obtain heat regardless of the venting.
In contrast, DOE reasoned that a
resident of a high-rise apartment or
condominium building that is not
architecturally designed to
accommodate vented clothes dryers
would have no option in terms of
installing and enjoying the utility of a
dryer in their home unless he or she
used a ventless dryer.
As explained above, DOE’s
conclusion in the March 12, 2015 NOPR
was that the utility of a furnace involves
providing heat to a consumer. DOE
reasoned that such utility is provided by
any type of furnace, but to the extent
that a consumer has a preference for a
particular fuel type (e.g., gas),
improvements in venting technology
may eventually allow a consumer to
obtain the efficiency of a condensing
furnace using the existing venting in a
residence by sharing venting space with
water heaters. DOE postulated that this
update in technology significantly
would reduce the cost burden
associated with installing condensing
furnaces and reduce potential instances
of ‘‘orphaned’’ water heaters, where the
furnace and water heater can no longer
share the same venting (due to one unit
being condensing and the other
noncondensing). In other words, when
mature, this technology could allow
consumers to switch from a noncondensing furnace to a condensing
furnace in a greater variety of
applications, such as urban row houses.
For more information, interested parties
were asked to consult appendix 8L of
the NOPR TSD.
C. The Gas Industry Petition
As noted above, on October 18, 2018,
DOE received a petition from the Gas
Industry Petitioners asking DOE to: (1)
Issue an interpretive rule stating that
DOE’s proposed energy conservation
standards for residential furnaces and
commercial water heaters would result
in the unavailability of ‘‘performance
characteristics’’ within the meaning of
the Energy Policy and Conservation Act
of 1975, as amended (i.e., by setting
standards which can only be met by
condensing combustion technology
products/equipment) and (2) withdraw
the proposed energy conservation
standards for residential furnaces and
commercial water heaters based upon
such findings. In their petition, the Gas
Industry Petitioners argue that DOE
misinterpreted its mandate under
section 325(o)(4) of EPCA by failing to
consider as a ‘‘feature’’ of the subject
residential furnaces and commercial
water heating equipment the
compatibility of a product/equipment
with conventional atmospheric venting
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systems and the ability to operate
without generating liquid condensate
requiring disposal via a plumbing
connection. Consequently, the Gas
Industry Petitioners assert that DOE’s
proposals would make unavailable noncondensing products/equipment with
such features, which currently exist in
the marketplace, in contravention of the
statute. The petition makes a number of
technical, legal, and economic
arguments in favor of its suggested
interpretation, and it points to DOE’s
past precedent related to space
constraints and differences in available
electrical power supply (and associated
installation costs) as supporting its call
to find that non-condensing technology
amounts to a performance-related
‘‘feature.’’ Based upon these arguments,
the Gas Industry Petitioners conclude
that DOE should issue an interpretive
rule treating non-condensing technology
as a ‘‘feature’’ under EPCA, withdraw its
rulemaking proposals for both
residential furnaces and commercial
water heaters, and proceed on the basis
of this revised interpretation.
III. Response to Comments
DOE received a number of comments
on the Gas Industry Petition with
commenters both supporting the
petition for rulemaking and opposing
the petition. Comments from gas
industry associations, certain
manufacturer associations, and certain
individual manufacturers generally
expressed support for the petition.
Comments from efficiency advocacy
organizations, consumer advocacy
organizations, other manufacturers, and
certain States and Attorneys General
generally oppose it. The following
sections of this proposed interpretive
rule summarize the comments received
on the Gas Industry Petition and
provide DOE’s responses to those
comments. DOE then proposes an
interpretation consistent with its
statutory authority and that considers
the comments received along with all
other available information. To aid in
organizing the comments, this section
categorizes public comments on the Gas
Industry Petition in terms of legal
authority, technical matters,
implementation, and other related
issues.
A. Legal Authority
As DOE explained in section II.B of
this document, for the purpose of EPCA,
DOE has in prior instances considered
product/equipment ‘‘features’’ in the
context of the consumer’s interaction
with the appliance in question. With the
submission of the Gas Industry Petition,
DOE is re-evaluating its prior
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interpretations in the context of the
petition and providing stakeholders and
the interested public an opportunity to
submit comments and information to
further inform DOE’s consideration,
particularly in regards to its technical
implications, as well as the needs of
consumers (including those with low
incomes).
DOE is issuing the interpretation as an
interpretative rule within the meaning
of the Administrative Procedure Act
(APA). 5 U.S.C. 551(4), 553(b). DOE is
publishing a proposed interpretation to
solicit comment and to provide the
public with a clear and transparent
explanation of DOE’s view of a specific
legal question: Whether non-condensing
technology and associated venting
constitutes a performance-related
‘‘feature’’ under 42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(4),9
as would support a separate product/
equipment class under 42 U.S.C.
6295(q)(1),10 including the authority
that Congress conferred on DOE through
those provisions.
1. Legal Authority To Set Separate
Product/Equipment Classes Based Upon
Condensing and Non-Condensing
Technologies
The Gas Industry petition raises the
issue of whether non-condensing
technology, including the associated
venting, constitutes a ‘‘performance
characteristic’’ or ‘‘feature’’ under 42
U.S.C. 6295(o)(4), and if it is so, whether
it justifies a separate product/equipment
class under 42 U.S.C. 6295(q)(1).
Commenters had divergent views
regarding DOE’s legal authority to
determine non-condensing technology
used in furnaces and water heaters,
including the associated venting, is a
‘‘performance characteristic’’ or
‘‘feature’’ within the meaning of the
statute, and whether as a ‘‘performance
characteristic’’ or ‘‘feature’’ it would
justify a separate product/equipment
class and standard. Such views are
summarized in the immediately
following paragraphs.
Comments from the gas industry,
certain manufacturers, housing
associations, and a number of
individuals generally supported the
interpretation of ‘‘performance
characteristic’’ and ‘‘feature’’ put forth
in the Gas Industry Petition (i.e., noncondensing technology and the
associated venting is a ‘‘performance
characteristic’’ for the purpose of
EPCA), arguing that DOE is statutorily
prohibited from adopting standards that
9 42 U.S.C. 6316(a) for non-ASHRAE equipment;
42 U.S.C. 6313(a)(6)(B)(iii)(II)(aa) for ASHRAE
equipment where DOE is setting more-stringent
standards.
10 42 U.S.C. 6316(a) for non-ASHRAE equipment.
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would effectively eliminate this
performance characteristic. (Gas
Industry Petitioners Joint Comment, No.
44 at pp. 1 and 3; Mortex, No. 58 at p.
1; Weil-McLain, No. 29 at p. 1; PHCC,
No. 53 at p. 1; Southern Company, No.
33 at p. 1; Suburban Propane, No. 13 at
p. 1; Nortek, No. 35 at pp. 1 and 2;
NMHC/NAA/NLHA Joint Comment, No.
41 at p. 1; Baker, No. 4 at p. 1;
Matchneer, No. 21 at p. 1) These
commenters emphasized the point
presented in the Gas Industry Petition
that the ability to use category I
venting 11 and to operate without
formation of condensate are
performance characteristics and/or
features that DOE cannot eliminate
under EPCA.
Southern Company asserted that noncondensing furnaces and water heaters
provide ‘‘unique utility’’ in terms of
their ability to commonly vent with
other gas appliances, vent into masonry
chimneys, operate in unconditioned
space without freeze protection, easily
install in retrofit applications, and
operate without the need to dispose of
condensate. (Southern Company, No. 33
at p. 2) Nortek stated that an energy
conservation standard that requires the
use of condensing technology would
eliminate the ability to combine the
venting of other non-condensing
appliances with the furnace or
commercial water heater. (Nortek, No.
35 at p. 2) NMHC, NAAA, and NLHA
stated that in the context of existing
multifamily properties, installation of a
condensing unit may require
construction of an entirely new
ventilation system within the apartment
to meet the horizontal venting
requirements of the condensing furnace
unit, and in many properties, there is
not sufficient clearance on the exterior
wall of the property to locate a
ventilation pipe due to existing
windows and doors. (NMHC/NAA/
NLHA Joint Comment, No. 41 at p. 2)
Regarding commercial hot water
heaters, Rheem stated that according to
the Energy Information Agency (EIA)
2012 Commercial Buildings Energy
Consumption Survey (CBECS) data,
more than half of all commercial
buildings were constructed before
condensing commercial water heaters
were introduced to the market and that
in older buildings having greater than 3stories with the water heater(s) located
in the interior of the building structure,
it is generally difficult, if not
impossible, to replace non-condensing
water heaters with condensing water
11 Category I venting has a non-positive vent
pressure and is suitable for non-condensing
appliances.
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heaters due primarily to the need to
replace or reline existing vents/
chimneys. (Rheem, No. 34 at p. 2)
Southern Company further commented
that non-condensing units can be
installed in unconditioned space
without the use of potentially dangerous
heat tapes or other devices that prevent
condensate from freezing. (Southern
Company, No. 33 at p. 4)
Several of the commenters in support
of the Gas Industry Petition asserted that
there is precedent for establishing
separate product classes for noncondensing furnaces and water heaters.
(Gas Industry Petitioners Joint
Comment, No. 44 at pp. 5–6; Mortex,
No. 58 at p. 2; Southern Company, No.
33 at pp. 2–4; Nortek, No. 35 at p. 2;
MHI, No. 54 at p. 2) The Gas Industry
Petitioners stated that the issues facing
the replacement of a non-condensing
unit with a condensing unit are similar,
but greater in magnitude, to installation
issues for products that DOE has
established separate ‘‘spaceconstrained’’ product classes. (Gas
Industry Petitioners Joint Comment, No.
44 at pp. 4–5) Southern Company
specifically referenced as applicable
precedent the separate product classes
established for gas-fired natural draft
commercial packaged boilers, the
standard-size equipment class for
package terminal air conditioners and
heat pumps, space-constrained central
air conditioners and heat pumps,
tabletop water heaters, and compact
products such as clothes dryers.
(Southern Company, No. 33 at pp. 3–4)
Mortex and Southern Company pointed
to the establishment of separate classes
of furnace fans based on use in a
condensing versus non-condensing
furnace as support for establishing
separate classes as requested in the Gas
Industry Petition. (Mortex, No. 58 at p.
2; Southern Company, No. 33 at p. 3)
Various other commenters opposed
the Gas Industry Petition and asserted
that the method of venting, type of type
of vent, and condensate disposal system
associated with a furnace or water
heater does not qualify as a
performance-related characteristic or
feature under EPCA. (CA IOUs Joint
Comment, No. 45 at pp. 1–2;
EarthJustice/NRDC Joint Comment, No.
55 at p. 1; Mitsubishi, No. 10 at p. 1;
Multi-State AGs Joint Comment, No. 49
at pp. 1–2, 6; NEMA, No. 46 at p. 4;
NEEA, No. 59 at pp. 1–2; CEC, No. 56
at pp. 1–2 ; NCLC/CFA Joint Comment,
No. 50 at pp. 1–2; ASAP et al. Joint
Comment, No. 61 at p. 4) Referencing
DOE’s prior, tentative analysis of the
issue under EPCA, commenters stated
that condensing and non-condensing
furnaces and water heaters provide
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identical performance characteristics in
the form of warm air or hot water,
respectively; that installation cost is not
a performance characteristic for the
purpose of 42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(4); and
that non-condensing technology does
not justify a separate product class. (CA
IOUs Joint Comment, No. 45 at pp. 2–
3; EarthJustice/NRDC Joint Comment,
No. 55 at pp. 5 and 13; Multi-State AGs
Joint Comment, No. 49 at p. 7; NEEA,
No. 59 at p. 5; CEC, No. 56 at p. 2; CEL,
No. 3 at p. 1; NCLC/CFA Joint
Comment, No. 50 at p. 5; ASAP et al.
Joint Comment, No. 61 at p. 4) NEMA
stated that increased cost of installation
is not a performance characteristic or
feature under paragraphs 42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(4) and (q)(1). (NEMA, No. 46 at
pp. 4, 11) NEMA further stated that
while the type of venting may be a
‘‘characteristic’’ or ‘‘feature,’’ it is not
one that has utility to the consumer; the
consumer suffers no loss of utility by no
longer being able to use a ‘‘type B’’
metal vent with a condensing furnace.
(NEMA, No, 46 at pp. 15–16) While
NEMA agreed with the result of DOE’s
tentative determination, NEMA
cautioned that DOE should not
exclusively conflate an appliance’s
‘‘basic function’’ with a useful feature,
capacity, characteristic, size, or volume.
(NEMA, No. 46 at p. 17)
EarthJustice and NRDC argued that
Congress intended the provision at 42
U.S.C. 6295(o)(4) only to address the
possibility that efficiency standards
could completely destroy the market for
a covered product. (EarthJustice/NRDC
Joint Comment, No. 55 at p. 3)
Additionally, EarthJustice and NRDC
asserted that the difference in language
between 42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(4) and 42
U.S.C. 6313(a)(6)(iii)(II)(aa) indicates
that ‘‘performance characteristic’’ means
something different for residential
products and commercial equipment.
Specifically, this comment imparts
significant meaning to Congress’s
placement of a single parentheses
within these two statutory provisions;
on the residential side, 42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(4) describes ‘‘performance
characteristics’’ as ‘‘(including
reliability)’’ and then following with
‘‘features, sizes, capacities, and
volumes,’’ but on the commercial side,
42 U.S.C. 6313(a)(6)(B)(iii)(II)(aa)
describes ‘‘performance characteristics’’
as ‘‘(including reliability, features, sizes,
capacities, and volumes).’’ (EarthJustice/
NRDC Joint Comment, No. 55 at p. 4)
EarthJustice and NRDC continued that
the method of venting and condensate
disposal are not performance features
under either provision, but ‘‘installation
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features.’’ (EarthJustice/NRDC Joint
Comment, No. 55 at p. 4)
A number of commenters stated that
not every technology design option
should be captured as a separate
‘‘performance characteristic’’ or
‘‘feature,’’ because such approach would
preclude DOE from ever setting
incrementally more stringent energy
conservation standards. (CA IOUs Joint
Comment, No. 45 at p. 3; NRDC, No. 60
at p. 4, 6–7; Multi-State AGs Joint
Comment, No. 49 at p. 7; A.O. Smith,
No. 51 at p. 3; CEC, No. 56 at p. 1)
Commenters asserted that the
appropriate precedent is DOE’s prior
determination in the residential water
heater rulemaking in which DOE
determined that heat pump heaters
provide hot water to a residence just as
a traditional electric storage water
heater does, and, therefore, a standard
level that effectively bans electric
resistance heating does not violate 42
U.S.C. 6295(o)(4). (CA IOUs Joint
Comment, No. 45 at p. 3; NEMA, No. 46
pp. 7–8)
In opposition to the petition,
commenters further stated that to the
extent that there are installation cost
differences between the venting
technologies, those costs should be
addressed in DOE’s economic analysis
and are not relevant to the
determination of product/equipment
classes. (CA IOUs Joint Comment, No.
45 at pp. 3–4; EarthJustice/NRDC Joint
Comment, No. 55 at p. 7; NRDC, No. 60
at p. 8; ASAP et al. Joint Comment, No.
61 at pp. 3–4) EarthJustice and NRDC
did state that DOE appropriately
established separate product classes for
through-the-wall central air
conditioners and heat pumps to avoid
requiring changes in the physical size of
the through-the-wall systems and
modifications to the buildings in which
they are installed. (EarthJustice/NRDC
Joint Comment, No. 55 at p. 10–11)
A number of commenters stated that
with rare exceptions, condensing
furnaces and water heaters are no more
difficult to install than non-condensing
units, and they added that in the small
number of situations where there are
difficulties, there are work-arounds.
(Mitsubishi, No. 10 at pp. 1–2, 6; MultiState AGs Joint Comment, No. 49 at p.
8; NEEP, No. 48 at p. 1; NEEA, No. 59
at pp. 1–2; CEC, No. 56 at p. 3; A.O.
Smith, No. 51 at p. 4; Triple-T, No. 63
at p. 1) NEEA and the State Attorneys
General provided the summary of a
survey of residential furnace installers,
based on which they stated that the
percentage of homes with the conditions
necessary to present significant issues is
likely to be less than 5 percent of the
retrofit installations. (NEEA, No. 59 at p.
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2; Multi-State AGs Joint Comment, No.
49 at p. 8) The State Attorneys General
added that those interviewed for the
survey stated that even in ‘‘difficult’’
cases, technical solutions are possible.
(Multi-State AGs Joint Comment, No. 49
at p. 8) Mitsubishi stated that cases
where installation of condensing
equipment is more difficult than
replacing with non-condensing
equipment are rare, and it estimated that
such conditions exist in less than 1
percent of the total housing stock.
(Mitsubishi, No. 10 at p. 4) The CEC
identified a commercially-available
product (i.e., FasNSeal 80/90 by
DuraVent) that allows for combined
venting of an atmospheric appliance
and a condensing appliance, thereby
mitigating the issue of ‘‘orphaned’’
water heaters. (CEC, No. 56 at p. 3)
In response, DOE recognizes the
importance of its interpretation of
‘‘performance characteristic’’ and
‘‘feature’’ in the context of condensing
vs. non-condensing furnaces, water
heaters, and similarly situated products/
equipment. The submission of
comments and other information
pursuant to the Gas Industry Petition
has heightened DOE’s awareness of the
real world impacts facing consumers of
such products/equipment. In the past,
DOE viewed venting of condensing vs.
non-condensing as a technological and
economic issue incidental to the
appliance’s purpose of providing heat or
hot water to a dwelling or business.
DOE has now come to see that it may
have been too narrow in its focus.
Commenters have made persuasive
arguments that a consumer’s interaction
with and perception of a furnace or
water heater may go beyond its primary
function.
For example, adoption of an energy
conservation standard requiring the use
of condensing technology could
potentially impact a home’s aesthetics,
if a new installation or retrofit were to
entail additional venting in the
conditioned space. Consumers would
likely notice the new venting, and it
might deprive them of some enjoyment
related to the appearance of their home.
In other cases, the condensing furnace
may be of a different size or shape, and
it may require modifications to existing
utility closets or similarly constrained
spaces, again potentially impacting the
aesthetics of a room’s layout. To that
extent, non-condensing appliances may
be similar to the space-constrained
appliances which EarthJustice and
NRDC point to in their comments as an
appropriate use of EPCA’s features
provision. (DOE requests comments
regarding any size-related impacts of the
use of condensing technology, such as
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Manufactured housing associations,
certain manufacturers to the
manufactured housing industry, and a
number of individuals faulted DOE’s
2016 furnaces SNOPR (81 FR 65720
(Sept. 23, 2016)) for its failure to
consider a ‘‘small’’ mobile home
furnaces product class. Due to the cost
impacts to manufactured housing
consumers and these consumers’
sensitivity to price increases, these
commenters argued that DOE should
have considered a ‘‘small’’ product class
for mobile home furnaces. According to
these commenters, manufactured
housing is disproportionately impacted
due to the comparatively high number
of manufactured homes that rely on
non-condensing gas furnaces as
compared to site-built homes, as well as
the disproportionate number of homes
in the south where the payback of a
high-efficiency furnace is less. (MHI,
No. 54 at pp. 1, 3–4; MMHAM, No. 43
at p. 2; MMHA, No. 42 at p. 2; IMHA–
RVIC, No. 32 at p. 2; NMMHA, No. 28
at pp. 1–2; WHA, No. 24 at pp. 1–2;
MHIA, No. 23 at p. 2; Oliver
Technologies, No. 16 at p. 1; Mortex,
No. 58 at p. 2; Individuals, Nos. 17–22,
25–27, 30–31, 36–40, 47, 57 at pp. 1–2)
In the September 2016 furnaces
SNOPR, DOE explained its rationale for
proposing that energy conservation
standards for mobile home gas furnaces
should be set at 92 percent annual fuel
utilization efficiency (AFUE). 81 FR
65720, 65743–65744 (Sept. 23, 2016).
First, DOE stated that under the
proposed standard, 63 percent of mobile
home gas furnaces (MHGFs) would see
a net benefit from such standards,
whereas only 8 percent would
experience a net cost. DOE anticipated
minimal fuel switching, because for new
mobile homes, the type of heating
equipment tends to be determined by
the intended location of the home, the
expected heating load, and the
availability of a gas supply. For
replacement applications, DOE found
that switching away from gas is not
likely because the cost increase for
installing a condensing furnace relative
to a non-condensing furnace is not a
significant factor due to a much simpler
venting system compared to installation
of a non-weatherized gas furnace
(NWGF). Id. at 81 FR 65743. As to the
costs, DOE’s analyses determined that
the expected average cost of a
condensing furnace in a new mobile
home is comparable to a noncondensing furnace, because the
increase in the price of the product is
offset by a lower installation cost for a
condensing furnace for most
installations.13 The SNOPR noted that
12 See chapter 8 of the September 2016 SNOPR
TSD for Residential Furnaces (Available at: https://
www.regulations.gov/document?D=EERE-2014-BTSTD-0031-0217).
13 In the SNOPR, DOE stated that the standard for
MHGF furnace fans requires technology (improved
PSC motor) that entails a slight price increase ($11)
in 2013$ compared to the baseline PSC motor (see
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that related to the need for more heat
exchanger surface area.)
Although DOE continues to believe
that the distinction between condensing
and non-condensing appliances is
largely a matter of economics for most
consumers, for some subset of the
population, it is something much more
than that. As commenters representing
the manufactured housing industry and
individual owners of such units made
clear, energy conservation standards at
condensing levels could price some
low-income consumers out of the
housing market entirely. Below that
level, other low-income consumers
could face a financial hardship once
they are forced to purchase a
condensing furnace, which on average
for mobile home gas furnaces costs
between $152 and $331 (total installed
cost; 2015$) more than a noncondensing furnace.12 (Consistently,
DOE’s data support the finding in the
fuel switching analysis of the September
23, 2016 supplemental notice of
proposed rulemaking (September 2016
SNOPR) that accounted for instances
where installation of a condensing
furnace was either too difficult or costly,
with the result being substitution of
another type of heating product. 81 FR
65720, 65791–65793 (Sept. 23, 2016)
(see also Chapter 8J of the SNOPR
technical support document (TSD)). For
such consumers, there could be difficult
choices to be made between heat and
other necessities such as food or
medical care. The potential for overall
energy savings after a long payback
period does little to ameliorate such
short-term impacts. In light of these
reasons, DOE has tentatively concluded
that the totality of such concerns may
raise non-condensing appliances (and
their associated venting) sufficiently in
the consciousness of the consumer as to
be deemed a ‘‘feature’’ under EPCA.
DOE does not believe that its proposed
interpretation would have a cascading
effect that would prevent it from ever
setting a standard that would eliminate
a less-efficient technology; instead, DOE
would continue to determine ‘‘features’’
based upon consumer utility on a caseby-case basis.
2. Legal Authority To Set a ‘‘Small’’
Furnaces Product Class for Mobile
Home Furnaces
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new furnaces installed in mobile homes
must be approved by the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, which requires special
sealed combustion (direct vent) for all
non-condensing and condensing
installations of manufactured home
furnaces. (24 CFR 3280.709(d)(1)) For
condensing installations, the polyvinyl
chloride (PVC) piping is usually less
expensive than the metal vent system
used for non-condensing furnaces.
Thus, DOE reasoned that there is not
likely to be any effect on the
affordability of single-section mobile
homes due to the SNOPR’s proposed
MHGF standard. Id. at 81 FR 65744.
Nevertheless, to the extent DOE
moves to consider non-condensing
furnaces and water heaters (and
associated ductwork) to be a ‘‘feature’’
under EPCA, these commenters’
concerns should be resolved, because
mobile home purchasers would retain
the choice of purchasing a furnace using
non-condensing or condensing
technology.
B. Fuel Switching
A number of commenters expressed
concern that a national condensing
furnaces standard would drive fuel
switching and/or extend the use of less
efficient appliances, because consumers
who cannot afford more-expensive
condensing technology will choose to
switch to a non-gas heating option,
repair their existing gas furnace, or use
other less-efficient means of heating
such as space heaters. (Gas Industry
Petitioners Joint Comment, No. 44 at p.
3; MHI, No. 54 at p. 5; PHCC, No. 53 at
p. 2; NMHC/NAA/NLHA Joint
Comment, No. 41 at p. 2)
In contrast, the CEC argued that fuel
switching is a cost impact, not a utility
impact, as it does not disrupt service to
the consumer of warm air or hot water.
(CEC, No. 56 at p. 3) The CEC also stated
that the costs related to fuel switching
were included in DOE’s life-cycle cost
analysis in the September 2016 SNOPR
for residential furnaces. (CEC, No. 56 at
p. 3)
EarthJustice and NRDC stated that
fuel switching is not an obstacle to
amended standards under EPCA. These
commenters noted that for small gas
furnaces, EPCA required that DOE
prescribe energy conservation standards
at a level ‘‘which the Secretary
determines is not likely to result in a
furnace fan energy conservation standards final
rule; available at: https://www.regulations.gov/
#!documentDetail;D=EERE-2010-BT-STD-00110117). This cost is applicable to less than 50 percent
of installations because the rest of the market is
already comprised of MHGFs with improved PSC
motors or motors with higher efficiencies.
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significant shift from gas heating to
electric resistance heating with respect
to either residential construction or
furnace replacement,’’ and asserted that
Congress could have easily extended
this requirement to other gas products
but did not. EarthJustice and NRDC
stated that, therefore, Congress did not
intend to prevent the adoption of
standards that may lead consumers to
change their space or water heating
energy sources. These commenters
further argued that Congress’s
instruction to avoid fuel-switching in
the initial small furnaces rulemaking
would be superfluous if other parts of
the statute were already intended to
prohibit fuel switching. (EarthJustice/
NRDC Joint Comment, No. 55 at pp. 8–
9)
As the commenters noted, DOE
addressed the potential for fuel
switching in the September 2016
SNOPR. 81 FR 65720, 65723, and
Chapter 8 of the September 2016
SNOPR Technical Support Document
(TSD).14 DOE agrees with the CEC,
EarthJustice, and NRDC that concerns
about fuel switching alone or in
isolation would probably not justify a
determination that non-condensing
appliances (and associated venting)
constitute a ‘‘feature’’ deserving a
separate product/equipment class under
EPCA. However, for the reasons
previously stated, DOE has tentatively
concluded that the choice of purchasing
a non-condensing appliance is
something that matters to some
significant portion of consumers
(especially persons with low-incomes),
with concerns ranging from impacts on
the aesthetics of the home to overall
choice of housing options. To the extent
DOE determines non-condensing
technology (and associated venting) to
be a feature, any fuel switching among
such appliances going forward will be
voluntary on the part of the consumer
and not driven by government
regulation.
C. Analytical Issues
Some commenters raised concerns
with the analytical methodology
underlying DOE’s rulemakings for
residential furnaces and commercial
water heaters. (Gas Industry Petitioners
Joint Comment, No. 44 at pp. 12–13;
Rheem, No. 34 at pp. 2–3; NMHC/NAA/
NLHA Joint Comment, No. 41 at p. 2;
Weil McLain, No. 29 at p. 1) Among the
issues raised by these commenters were
that the national average approach to
economic justification fails to consider
14 The September 2016 SNOPR TSD is available
at https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=EERE2014-BT-STD-0031-0217.
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the excessive localized costs that are
certain to be incurred if non-condensing
performance characteristics are
eliminated. (Weil McLain, No. 29 at pp.
1–2)
DOE has attempted in prior
residential furnaces and commercial
water heaters rulemakings to capture
localized effects (e.g., regional climate,
local utility rates, building type, local
contractor labor rates, high-cost
installations) in the life-cycle cost (LCC)
analyses. DOE presented the average
LCC results in summary form in the
September 23, 2016 SNOPR. 81 FR
65720, 65814–65816. In chapter 8 of the
September 23, 2016 furnaces SNOPR
TSD, DOE presented the results in
charts showing the mean and median
LCC savings, along with the 5th, 25th,
75th, and 95th percentiles, to
demonstrate the impacts of more
extreme cases (both positive and
negative). The same type of analysis was
conducted for commercial water heaters
in the May 31, 2016 NOPR. 81 FR
34440, 34482–34488.
Commenters also asserted that there is
a fundamental flaw in DOE’s modeling
approach in that the base-case
distribution of efficiencies is assigned
randomly, rather than accounting for
some consumers making economically
rational decisions. (Gas Industry
Petitioners Joint Comment, No. 44 at pp.
11–12) In response, DOE would point
out that the base-case efficiency
distributions for residential furnaces
and commercial water heaters are not
entirely random. For furnaces,
assignment of efficiency in the base-case
was based on both the region and
specific building in which it is installed,
with the market shares of furnace
efficiencies first assigned by region
based on historical shipments data and
then allocated to specific buildings
within each region based on the existing
furnace being replaced. For commercial
water heaters, the no-new-standards
case and the selections in the LCC
model were also not completely
random, and rather were based on
distributions of models in DOE’s
database, which included all
commercially-available equipment on
the market at the time and which (due
to the absence of shipments data)
represented the best data available to
DOE at the time.
Furthermore, Rheem suggested that
the EIA 2003 CBECS data used in DOE’s
commercial water heaters proposal is
outdated, and DOE should recalculate
results using more up-to-date data and
re-evaluate its proposed standards
accordingly. (Rheem, No. 34 at p. 2) In
response, DOE notes that CBECS 2003
was the most recent version available at
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the time the analysis was conducted for
the notice of proposed rulemaking for
commercial water heating equipment. In
any potential future rulemaking
documents for commercial water
heating equipment, DOE would update
its analysis to utilize the most recent
version of CBECS (currently the 2012
version).
The National Multifamily Housing
Council (NMHC), the National
Apartment Association (NAA), and the
National Leased Housing Association
(NLHA) commented that DOE did not
include an adequate analysis of the
venting and condensate disposal system
installation costs for multi-story, multifamily properties in its proposals.
(NMHC/NAA/NLHA Joint Comment,
No. 41 at p. 2) In response, DOE notes
that requirements specific to multistory, multi-family properties were
considered in the LCC analyses for
residential furnaces and commercial
water heating equipment. DOE
acknowledged that multi-family
buildings may require additional
measures to replace non-condensing
furnaces with condensing furnaces,
noted that it did not find data that
would allow a reliable estimation of the
associated costs, and, therefore,
requested comment on the issue. 81 FR
65720, 65778. DOE estimated in the
September 23, 2016 SNOPR that more
than 60 percent of replacement multifamily NWGF installations would not be
impacted by the proposed standard. 81
FR 65720, 65780. For commercial water
heaters, in the May 2016 NOPR, DOE
included RECS data for multi-family
buildings in the building sample used
for its analysis, in order to account for
the unique venting requirements of
multi-family buildings, such as the vent
length. 81 FR 34440, 34482 (May 31,
2016).15
Rheem stated that efficiency
standards for commercial water heaters
that require condensing technology
could lead to fuel switching or multiple
residential water heaters as alternatives,
and suggested that DOE should consider
such costs as part of the life-cycle cost
analysis for commercial water heaters.
(Rheem, No. 34 at p. 3) As discussed in
the May 2016 NOPR, DOE considered
whether to model fuel switching in the
analysis for commercial water heating
equipment and tentatively determined
that fuel switching would be unlikely to
occur. 81 FR 34440, 34494 (May 31,
2016).
15 See chapter 8 and Appendix 8–D of the
Commercial Water Heating Equipment NOPR TSD
for further discussion. Available at: https://
www.regulations.gov/document?D=EERE-2014-BTSTD-0042-0016.
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Finally, Southern Company argued
that DOE’s analysis for residential
furnaces grossly overestimates the
capabilities of DuraVent FNS 80/90 as a
technological solution, because it does
not allow a condensing appliance to
operate with the same utility as a noncondensing model due to restrictions on
the circumstances in which it can be
used. (Southern Company, No. 33 at pp.
6–8)
DOE clarifies that it considered use of
the DuraVent FasNSeal (FNS) 80/90
only as a sensitivity analysis; DOE’s
main analysis does not assume that the
DuraVent FNS 80/90 would be used in
any installations. Because of the
uncertainty regarding applicability of
FNS 80/90 and other new venting
technologies, and lack of available field
data on such venting installations, DOE
has consistently maintained its
approach of only using this option in a
sensitivity analysis rather than its main
analysis. In this sensitivity analysis,
DOE only applied the FNS80/90 option
to installations that could meet the FNS
80/90 installation requirements. While
the previously noted comment from the
CEC identified the FNS 80/90 (CEC, No.
56 at p. 3) as a means to address
orphaned water heaters, the technology
is only commercially available for
applications with metal vents, and as
pointed out by Southern, can only be
used in certain situations where the
vent can be installed at the appropriate
angle to drain condensate. To address
stakeholders’ concerns regarding
overestimating the number of
installations that could use new venting
technologies, DOE plans to include an
additional sensitivity analysis in any
potential future rulemaking documents
for furnaces, where the FNS 80/90
option is applied to installations that
can currently meet the FNS 80/90
installation requirements.
Finally, DOE notes that in its
February 2019 NOPR regarding
proposed changes to its Process Rule,
the Department has announced its plans
to conduct a peer review of its suite of
rulemaking analyses as a second phase
to the revisions of its Process Rule. 84
FR 3910, 3936–3938 (Feb. 13, 2019).
Thus, DOE anticipates an ongoing
discussion about potential refinements
to its analytical methodologies and
modeling, including those issues raised
by commenters on the Gas Industry
Petition.
D. Consumer Impacts
A number of efficiency and consumer
advocacy organizations and the State
Attorneys General argued that granting
the requests in the Gas Industry Petition
would negatively impact consumers due
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to lost energy and cost savings. (NEEP,
No. 48 at p. 1; NEEA, No. 59 at p. 3;
NCLC/CFA, No. 50 at pp. 2–3; MultiState AGs Joint Comment, No. 49 at pp.
9–10; ASAP et al. Joint Comment, No.
61 at pp. 1–3) The State Attorneys
General also asserted that such action
would disrupt State and local energy
and climate goals. (Multi-State AGs
Joint Comment, No. 49 at pp. 9–10) The
Center for Efficient Living argued that
the Gas Industry Petitioners do not
represent the parties most directly
impacted by the regulations at issue, as
compared to consumers and
manufacturers, but instead, DOE must
recognize the significant advances in
heating, ventilation, and airconditioning technology in the past 10
years and not take actions which
counteract the associated public health,
indoor air quality (IAQ), and
environmental benefits. (CEL, No. 3 at p.
1)
In contrast, individual commenters
who support manufactured housing
stated that Federal regulation should
encourage manufactured housing as an
affordable ownership option, but DOE’s
proposal inhibits that by increasing new
home or retrofit costs, thereby
potentially pricing consumers out of the
manufactured housing market. These
commenters stated that the median
household income of manufactured
homeowners is $30,000, which makes
them very sensitive to any change in
first cost of a new home or retrofit costs
(e.g., reworking existing utility closets
due to larger units). It was also noted
that there is no exemption or other
accommodation for ‘‘small’’ furnaces,
which are often used in manufactured
homes. (Matchneer et al. (Form
Comments), Nos. 17–22, 25–27, 30–31,
36–40, 47, 57 at p. 1)
As discussed, in establishing and
amending energy conservation
standards, EPCA prescribes a number of
factors that DOE must consider. These
factors include the savings in operating
costs throughout the estimated average
life of the covered product compared to
any increase in the price of, or in the
initial charges for, or maintenance
expenses of, the covered products
which are likely to result from a
standard. (42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(2)(B)(i)(II))
DOE historically has accounted for and
considered the potential energy savings
to consumers through the LCC and PBP
analyses in all of its rulemakings. In
contrast, however, EPCA’s ‘‘features’’
provision demonstrates that Congress
intended certain aspects of products
with consumer utility to be preserved
despite the energy savings or other
benefits that might result from their
elimination. (42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(4); 42
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33019
U.S.C. 6313(a)(6)(B)(iii)(II)(aa); 42 U.S.C.
6316(a)) DOE recognizes the important
policy concerns raised by these
commenters, but the Department is
constrained to act within its statutory
authority. Thus, to the extent DOE
interprets EPCA’s ‘‘features’’ provision
as supporting separate products/
equipment classes for condensing and
non-condensing appliances, the
concerns of commenters regarding the
affordability of manufactured housing
are largely resolved. For other
consumers, DOE will account for them
as part of the standard-setting process
and develop energy conservation
standards that meet the seven criteria
for economic justification, are
technologically feasible, and produce
significant energy savings, as required
by EPCA. DOE would note that for
consumers who rent (including lowincome consumers), energy savings from
mandatory energy conservation
standards set at condensing levels are
likely to be offset, at least in part, by
higher rents to cover the landlord/
owner’s first cost of the more expensive
appliance.
E. Other Issues
Comments from the State Attorneys
General and certain efficiency advocacy
organizations commented that other
nations such as Canada and the United
Kingdom have successfully adopted and
implemented regulations requiring
condensing technology. (CEC, No. 56 at
p. 3; Multi-State AGs Joint Comment,
No. 49 at p. 8; ASAP et al. Joint
Comment, No. 61 at p. 4) In response,
DOE acknowledges both the energy
savings potential of condensing
appliances and the adoption of related
regulatory requirements by other
nations such as Canada and the U.K.
However, DOE must act in accordance
with domestic law (i.e., EPCA) in
formulating energy conservation
standards, complying with all relevant
requirements, including the features
provision.
Additionally, the State Attorneys
General argued that granting the Gas
Industry Petition would impermissibly
further delay DOE’s publication of final
rule for the products/equipment in
question, rules which EPCA requires
DOE to publish within two years after
a proposal. The commenters pointed out
that DOE’s statutory deadlines for
promulgating final furnace and water
heater standards expired in March 2017
and May 2018, respectively. (Multi-State
AGs Joint Comment, No. 49 at pp. 4–6)
In response, DOE remains cognizant of
its legal deadlines and plans to act
expeditiously to comply with its
mandates pursuant to EPCA. At the
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same time, the Gas Industry Petitioners
have the right to petition for rulemaking
under the Administrative Procedure
Act, which provides that ‘‘[e]ach agency
shall give an interested person the right
to petition for the issuance, amendment,
or repeal of a rule.’’ 5 U.S.C. 553(e).
DOE is not at liberty to pick and choose
among its legal obligations, but instead
it must comply with all applicable legal
requirements. In this case, DOE must
evaluate and respond to the Gas
Industry Petition and then implement
any revised interpretation in the context
of its ongoing rulemaking obligations.
IV. DOE’s Proposed Revised
Interpretation
In consideration of public comments
and other information received on the
Gas Industry Petition, DOE proposes to
revise its interpretation of EPCA’s
‘‘features’’ provision in the context of
condensing and non-condensing
technology used in furnaces, water
heating equipment, and similarlysituated appliances (where permitted by
EPCA). Based on those comments, DOE
prospectively interprets the statute to
provide that adoption of energy
conservation standards that would limit
the market to natural gas and/or
propane gas furnaces, water heaters, or
similarly situated products/equipment
(where permitted by EPCA) that use
condensing combustion technology
would result in the unavailability of a
performance related feature within the
meaning of 42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(4) and 42
U.S.C. 6313(a)(6)(B)(iii)(II)(aa) and 42
U.S.C. 6316(a).
The statute accords the Secretary of
Energy considerable discretion in terms
of determining whether a performance
characteristic of a covered product/
equipment amounts to a performancerelated feature which cannot be
eliminated through adoption of an
energy conservation standard. DOE has
taken the opportunity presented by the
Gas Industry Petition to reconsider its
historical interpretation of EPCA’s
‘‘features’’ provision in the context of
condensing and non-condensing
technologies used by certain gas
appliances. Contrary to the petitioners’
assessment, DOE found this to be a close
case, with persuasive arguments on both
sides of the issue. However, a number
of factors have convinced DOE to revise
its interpretation.
First, DOE acknowledges that it has,
in the past, taken space constraints and
similar limitations into account when
setting product classes (e.g., PTACs,
ventless clothes dryers). For example,
DOE was sensitive to the costs
associated with requiring expensive
building modifications when it decided
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to set separate equipment classes for
standard size PTACs and non-standard
size PTACs. 73 FR 58772 (Oct. 7, 2008).
DOE expects that similar expenses
would occur here, if DOE were to hold
to its historical interpretation, at least
for some subset of installations.
Although limited data were provided to
address the actual costs that consumers
and commercial customers would face
to modify their existing category I
venting, there is little doubt that some
number of such installations would be
quite costly. These more complicated/
costly installations are documented as
part of DOE’s analysis of the venting
costs for residential furnaces, which
considered potential venting
modifications that could be required
when replacing an existing category I
furnace with a condensing (category IV)
furnace (see appendix 8D of the 2016
SNOPR TSD for further details).
Second, DOE has in the past focused
on the consumer’s interaction with the
product/equipment in deciding whether
a performance feature is at issue. In the
context of residential furnaces and
commercial water heaters, DOE has
focused on the primary function of the
appliance (e.g., providing heat to a
home or potable hot water) in
establishing the nexus to the consumer.
In the past, DOE opined that consumers
were only interested in obtaining heat or
hot water from the appliance, so they
would not care about the mechanism for
generating that end product. However,
commenters have made clear that in at
least some cases, the physical changes
associated with a condensing appliance
may change a home’s aesthetics (e.g., by
adding new venting into the living
space or decreasing closet or other
storage space), thereby impacting
consumer utility even under DOE’s
prior approach.
Third, DOE notes that it has been its
policy to remain neutral regarding
competing energy sources in the
marketplace. As certain commenters
have pointed out and as DOE’s own
analyses have shown, some enhanced
level of fuel switching is likely to
accompany standard setting using
DOE’s prior interpretation. Many
consumers who are currently gas
customers may show a proclivity for
that fuel type and would be negatively
impacted by a standard that requires the
purchase of a condensing unit to the
extent they feel compelled to change to
a different fuel type. DOE seeks neither
to determine winners and losers in the
marketplace nor to limit consumer
choice.
Finally, DOE is very concerned about
ensuring energy affordability,
particularly for persons with low
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incomes. Although energy efficiency
improvements may pay for themselves
over time, there is a significant increase
in first-cost associated with furnaces
and water heaters using condensing
technology. For consumers with
difficult installation situations (e.g.,
inner-city row houses), there would be
the added cost of potentially extensive
venting modifications. In certain cases,
commenters have argued that
accommodating condensing products
may not even be possible. Although
DOE continues to believe that costs are
properly addressed in the economic
analysis portion of its rulemakings, it
remains cognizant of such issues. DOE
has tentatively concluded that the other
reasons discussed immediately above
are sufficient in and of themselves to
justify the Department’s proposed
change in interpretation, but it
acknowledges these cost impacts in
order to be fully transparent in terms of
the agency’s thinking.
Creating separate product classes for
condensing and non-condensing
furnaces, water heaters, and similarly
situated products/equipment (where
permitted by EPCA) would prevent
many of these potential problems.
Although DOE’s proposed revised
approach may have some impact on
overall energy saving potential as a
result of establishing separate product/
equipment classes, that is not the
touchstone of EPCA’s ‘‘features’’
provision; through that provision,
Congress expressed its will that certain
product utilities will take priority over
additional energy savings measures.
(For example, DOE did not eliminate the
oven window which consumers found
useful, despite the potential for further
energy savings.) With that said, DOE
believes that any potentially negative
programmatic impacts of its revised
interpretation are likely to be limited.
This interpretation is likely to impact
only a limited set of appliances, and
DOE notes that market trends have
favored the growing reach of condensing
furnaces, even as non-condensing
alternatives have remained available.
DOE has every reason to believe that
such trends will continue.
DOE would clarify the limitations of
its proposed revised interpretation,
based upon the existing statutory
provisions. As discussed previously,
DOE can effect this change for all
relevant consumer products, all nonASHRAE commercial and industrial
equipment, and ASHRAE equipment in
those instances where DOE has clear
and convincing evidence to adopt levels
higher than the levels in ASHRAE
Standard 90.1.
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As noted, additional, subsequent DOE
action is required before the
interpretation in this proposed
interpretive rule can be implemented.
This proposed interpretive rule,
therefore, does not alter the
Department’s current regulations. This
interpretation does not and will not be
used to abrogate DOE’s responsibilities
under existing laws or regulations, nor
does it change DOE’s existing statutory
authorities or those of its regulators at
the Federal, State, or local level. DOE
anticipates continued engagement and
productive involvement of members of
the public and the regulated community
in subsequent activities that may follow
this interpretation.
V. Conclusion
As discussed immediately above, DOE
is granting the Gas Industry Petition to
the extent that it prospectively
interprets the statute to provide that
adoption of energy conservation
standards that would limit the market of
natural gas and/or propane gas furnaces,
water heaters, or similarly situated
products/equipment (where permitted
by EPCA) that use condensing
combustion technology would result in
the unavailability of a performance
related feature within the meaning of 42
U.S.C. 6295(o)(4) and 42 U.S.C.
6313(a)(6)(B)(iii)(II)(aa) and 42 U.S.C.
6316(a). Such interpretation would
apply to all applicable residential
products, non-ASHRAE commercial
equipment, and ASHRAE equipment
where DOE adopts a level more
stringent than the ASHRAE level.
DOE is denying the Gas Industry
Petition as it pertains to those
rulemakings where ASHRAE sets
standard levels that trigger DOE to
consider and adopt those level (unless
DOE finds clear and convincing
evidence to adopt more-stringent
levels), due to lack of authority. DOE is
also denying the Gas Industry Petition’s
request for DOE to withdraw the
proposed rules for residential furnaces
and commercial water heaters as
unnecessary. If this interpretive rule is
finalized, DOE anticipates developing
supplemental notices of proposed
rulemaking (SNOPRs) that would
implement the new legal interpretation
for those two rulemakings.
Through this interpretive rule, DOE
states its understanding of the best
interpretation of the statutory text in
light of the language and purposes of
EPCA, so as to be consistent with
Congress’s direction. In light of further
consideration and the information
presented with and in response to the
Gas Industry Petition, DOE’s position
has evolved, and it has tentatively
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concluded that this revised
interpretation is the best reading of
EPCA’s ‘‘features’’ provision. This
interpretation does not, by itself, change
existing applicable DOE regulations or
policies regarding individual appliance
standards rulemakings. Implementation
of this interpretation in the context of
energy conservation standards for
particular products or equipment, and
any changes to existing policies that
may be appropriate in light of this
interpretation will be the subject of
subsequent actions.
DOE wishes to make clear that an
interpretative rule is a type of rule or
regulation within the meaning of those
terms in the Administrative Procedure
Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. 551(4). It is well
established under the APA that agencies
have the authority to issue interpretative
rules, and that these rules are a valuable
tool for an agency to use to advise the
public prospectively and in a clear and
transparent manner of the agency’s
construction of a statute it administers.
As such, an interpretative rule does not
have force and effect on its own. It is not
until the agency takes an action in
which the interpretation is applied that
the interpretation can have an effect
and, even then, only through that
subsequent action.
When DOE considers this statutory
interpretation in the context of taking
any action in the future with regard to
energy conservation standards
rulemakings, it will evaluate its policies
to determine if any require revision to
accommodate this interpretation, and if
so, DOE will follow applicable
procedures to make any necessary
changes. However, DOE’s legal
interpretations do not themselves
constitute agency action.
DOE’s interpretation does not have
legal effect on its own. As appropriate,
the public will be notified and have an
opportunity to comment on any such
proposals implementing the
interpretation. Furthermore, the many
substantive comments received,
including comments that led to
revisions of DOE’s interpretation of the
‘‘features’’ provision,’’ as reflected in
this proposed interpretive rule, indicate
that the public had a meaningful
opportunity to comment on DOE’s
general interpretation. As DOE has
indicated, there will be additional
processes after the interpretation has
been issued but before any rulemaking
decisions are implemented.
VI. Public Participation
Submission of Comments
DOE invites all interested parties to
submit in writing by the date listed in
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33021
the DATES section of this document,
comments and information regarding
this proposed interpretive rule.
Submitting comments via https://
www.regulations.gov. The https://
www.regulations.gov web page will
require you to provide your name and
contact information prior to submitting
comments. Your contact information
will be viewable to DOE Building
Technologies staff only. Your contact
information will not be publicly
viewable except for your first and last
names, organization name (if any), and
submitter representative name (if any).
If your comment is not processed
properly because of technical
difficulties, DOE will use this
information to contact you. If DOE
cannot read your comment due to
technical difficulties and cannot contact
you for clarification, DOE may not be
able to consider your comment.
However, your contact information
will be publicly viewable if you include
it in the comment or in any documents
attached to your comment. Any
information that you do not want to be
publicly viewable should not be
included in your comment, nor in any
document attached to your comment.
Persons viewing comments will see only
first and last names, organization
names, correspondence containing
comments, and any documents
submitted with the comments.
Do not submit to https://
www.regulations.gov information for
which disclosure is restricted by statute,
such as trade secrets and commercial or
financial information (hereinafter
referred to as Confidential Business
Information (CBI)). Comments
submitted through https://
www.regulations.gov cannot be claimed
as CBI. Comments received through the
website will waive any CBI claims for
the information submitted. For
information on submitting CBI, see the
Confidential Business Information
section.
DOE processes submissions made
through https://www.regulations.gov
before posting. Normally, comments
will be posted within a few days of
being submitted. However, if large
volumes of comments are being
processed simultaneously, your
comment may not be viewable for up to
several weeks. Please keep the comment
tracking number that https://
www.regulations.gov provides after you
have successfully uploaded your
comment.
Submitting comments via email, hand
delivery, or postal mail. Comments and
documents via email, hand delivery, or
postal mail will also be posted to https://
www.regulations.gov. If you do not want
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your personal contact information to be
publicly viewable, do not include it in
your comment or any accompanying
documents. Instead, provide your
contact information on a cover letter.
Include your first and last names, email
address, telephone number, and
optional mailing address. The cover
letter will not be publicly viewable as
long as it does not include any
comments.
Include contact information in your
cover letter each time you submit
comments, data, documents, and other
information to DOE. If you submit via
postal mail or hand delivery, please
provide all items on a CD, if feasible, in
which case it is not necessary to submit
printed copies. No telefacsimiles (faxes)
will be accepted.
Comments, data, and other
information submitted electronically
should be provided in PDF (preferred),
Microsoft Word or Excel, WordPerfect,
or text (ASCII) file format. Provide
documents that are not secured, written
in English, and free of any defects or
viruses. Documents should not include
any special characters or any form of
encryption, and, if possible, they should
carry the electronic signature of the
author.
Campaign form letters. Please submit
campaign form letters by the originating
organization in batches of between 50 to
500 form letters per PDF or as one form
letter with a list of supporters’ names
compiled into one or more PDFs. This
reduces comment processing and
posting time.
Confidential Business Information.
Pursuant to 10 CFR 1004.11, any person
submitting information that he or she
believes to be confidential and exempt
by law from public disclosure should
submit via email, postal mail, or hand
delivery two well-marked copies: One
copy of the document marked
‘‘Confidential’’ including all the
information believed to be confidential,
and one copy of the document marked
‘‘Non-confidential’’ with the
information believed to be confidential
deleted. Submit these documents via
email or on a CD, if feasible. DOE will
make its own determination about the
confidential status of the information
and treat it according to its
determination.
Factors of interest to DOE when
evaluating requests to treat submitted
information as confidential include: (1)
A description of the items; (2) whether
and why such items are customarily
treated as confidential within the
industry; (3) whether the information is
generally known by or available from
other sources; (4) whether the
information has previously been made
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available to others without obligation
concerning its confidentiality; (5) an
explanation of the competitive injury to
the submitting person which would
result from public disclosure; (6) when
such information might lose its
confidential character due to the
passage of time, and (7) why disclosure
of the information would be contrary to
the public interest.
It is DOE’s policy that all comments
may be included in the public docket,
without change and as received,
including any personal information
provided in the comments (except
information deemed to be exempt from
public disclosure).
DOE considers public participation to
be a very important part of its process
for considering regulatory actions. DOE
actively encourages the participation
and interaction of the public during the
comment period. Interactions with and
between members of the public provide
a balanced discussion of the issues and
assist DOE in determining how to
proceed with a regulatory action.
Anyone who wishes to be added to DOE
mailing list to receive future document
and information about this matter
should contact Appliance and
Equipment Standards Program staff at
(202) 287–1445 or via email at
ApplianceStandardsQuestions@
ee.doe.gov.
VII. Approval of the Office of the
Secretary
The Secretary of Energy has approved
publication of this document granting in
part and denying in part the relevant
petition for rulemaking and issuing a
proposed interpretive rule.
Signed in Washington, DC, on June 28,
2019.
Daniel R. Simmons,
Assistant Secretary, Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy.
[FR Doc. 2019–14553 Filed 7–10–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 71
[Docket No. FAA–2019–0502; Airspace
Docket No. 19–ASO–13]
RIN 2120–AA66
Proposed Amendment of the Class E
Airspace; Haleyville, AL, and Hamilton,
AL
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
AGENCY:
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Notice of proposed rulemaking
(NPRM).
ACTION:
This action proposes to
amend the Class E airspace extending
upward from 700 feet above the surface
at Posey Field Airport, Haleyville, AL,
and Marion County-Rankin Fite Airport,
Hamilton, AL. The FAA is proposing
this action as the result of the
decommissioning of the Hamilton VHF
omnidirectional range (VOR) navigation
aid, which provided navigation
information for the instrument
procedures at this airport, as part of the
VOR Minimum Operational Network
(MON) Program. The name and
geographic coordinates of Marion
County-Rankin Fite Airport would also
be updated to coincide with the FAA’s
aeronautical database. Airspace redesign
is necessary for the safety and
management of instrument flight rules
(IFR) operations at these airports.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before August 26, 2019.
ADDRESSES: Send comments on this
proposal to the U.S. Department of
Transportation, Docket Operations,
West Building Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE,
Washington, DC 20590; telephone (202)
366–9826, or (800) 647–5527. You must
identify FAA Docket No. FAA–2019–
0502; Airspace Docket No. 19–ASO–13,
at the beginning of your comments. You
may also submit comments through the
internet at https://www.regulations.gov.
You may review the public docket
containing the proposal, any comments
received, and any final disposition in
person in the Dockets Office between
9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except federal holidays.
FAA Order 7400.11C, Airspace
Designations and Reporting Points, and
subsequent amendments can be viewed
online at https://www.faa.gov/air_traffic/
publications/. For further information,
you can contact the Airspace Policy
Group, Federal Aviation
Administration, 800 Independence
Avenue SW, Washington, DC 20591;
telephone: (202) 267–8783. The Order is
also available for inspection at the
National Archives and Records
Administration (NARA). For
information on the availability of FAA
Order 7400.11C at NARA, call (202)
741–6030, or go to https://
www.archives.gov/federal-register/cfr/
ibr-locations.html.
FAA Order 7400.11, Airspace
Designations and Reporting Points, is
published yearly and effective on
September 15.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jeffrey Claypool, Federal Aviation
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\11JYP1.SGM
11JYP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 133 (Thursday, July 11, 2019)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 33011-33022]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-14553]
========================================================================
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains notices to the public of
the proposed issuance of rules and regulations. The purpose of these
notices is to give interested persons an opportunity to participate in
the rule making prior to the adoption of the final rules.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 133 / Thursday, July 11, 2019 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 33011]]
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
10 CFR Parts 430 and 431
Energy Conservation Program for Appliance Standards: Energy
Conservation Standards for Residential Furnaces and Commercial Water
Heaters
AGENCY: Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, U.S.
Department of Energy.
ACTION: Granting in part and denying in part a petition for rulemaking;
notice of proposed interpretive rule; request for comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document responds to the petition for rulemaking
submitted on October 18, 2018 (Gas Industry Petition), by a number of
parties asking the Department of Energy (DOE) to issue an interpretive
rule and to withdraw related, previously published proposals. The Gas
Industry Petition was published in the Federal Register on November 1,
2018, for public review and input. After carefully considering the
public comments on the petition, DOE has decided to grant the request
for an interpretive rule. DOE has not made, and does not presently
propose, any changes or revisions to current policies, legal
requirements, or rulemakings with respect to condensing and non-
condensing products/equipment. Decisions about whether and how this
interpretation of the term ``feature'' in the context of condensing/
non-condensing products/equipment will apply to existing rulemakings
will be the subject of subsequent actions. Thus, DOE is denying the Gas
Industry Petitioners' request to withdraw its earlier proposed rules
for residential furnaces and commercial water heaters.
DATES: Written comments and information are requested on or before
September 9, 2019.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are encouraged to submit comments,
identified by ``Energy Conservation Standards for Residential Furnaces
and Commercial Water Heaters,'' by any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
Email: [email protected]. Include
Docket No. EERE-2018-BT-STD-0018 in the subject line of the message.
Submit electronic comments in WordPerfect, Microsoft Word, PDF, or
ASCII file format, and avoid the use of special characters or any form
of encryption.
Postal Mail: Appliance and Equipment Standards Program, U.S.
Department of Energy, Building Technologies Office, Mailstop EE-5B,
1000 Independence Avenue SW, Washington, DC 20585-0121. If possible,
please submit all items on a compact disc (CD), in which case it is not
necessary to include printed copies.
Hand Delivery/Courier: Appliance and Equipment Standards Program,
U.S. Department of Energy, Building Technologies Office, 950 L'Enfant
Plaza SW, Suite 600, Washington, DC 20024. Telephone: (202) 287-1445.
If possible, please submit all items on a CD, in which case it is not
necessary to include printed copies.
No telefacsimilies (faxes) will be accepted. For detailed
instructions on submitting comments and additional information, see
section VI of this document (Public Participation).
Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents, or
comments received, go to the Federal eRulemaking Portal at: https://www.regulations.gov/docket?D=EERE-2018-BT-STD-0018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Sofie Miller, Senior Advisor, U.S.
Department of Energy, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy,
1000 Independence Avenue SW, Washington, DC 20585. Telephone: (202)
586-5000. Email: [email protected].
Mr. Eris Stas, U.S. Department of Energy, Office of the General
Counsel, 1000 Independence Avenue SW, Washington, DC 20585. Telephone:
(202) 586-5827. Email: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background
II. Summary Description
A. Relevant Statutory Provisions
B. DOE's Historical Interpretation
C. The Gas Industry Petition
III. Response to Comments
A. Legal Authority
1. Legal Authority To Set Separate Product/Equipment Classes
Based Upon Condensing and Non-Condensing Technologies
2. Legal Authority To Set a ``Small'' Furnaces Product Class for
Mobile Home Furnaces
B. Fuel Switching
C. Analytical Issues
D. Market Trends
E. Consumer Impacts
F. Other Issues
IV. DOE's Proposed Revised Interpretation
V. Conclusion
VI. Public Participation
VII. Approval of the Office of the Secretary
I. Background
The Department sought public comments on the petition for
rulemaking submitted on October 18, 2018, by the American Public Gas
Association (APGA), Spire, Inc., the Natural Gas Supply Association
(NGSA), the American Gas Association (AGA), and the National Propane
Gas Association (NPGA), collectively referred to as the ``Gas Industry
Petitioners,'' asking DOE to: (1) Issue an interpretive rule stating
that DOE's proposed energy conservation standards for residential
furnaces and commercial water heaters would result in the
unavailability of ``performance characteristics'' within the meaning of
the Energy Policy and Conservation Act of 1975 \1\ (EPCA; 42 U.S.C.
6291 et seq.), as amended (i.e., by setting standards which can only be
met by condensing combustion technology products/equipment and thereby
precluding the distribution in commerce of non-condensing combustion
technology products/equipment) and (2) withdraw the proposed energy
conservation standards for residential furnaces \2\ and commercial
water heaters \3\ based upon
[[Page 33012]]
such findings. DOE published the petition in the Federal Register on
November 1, 2018 (83 FR 54883), which had a comment period scheduled to
close on January 30, 2019. DOE received two requests from interested
parties seeking an extension of the comment period in order to develop
additional data relevant to the petition. DOE granted those requests
through publication in the Federal Register of a document extending the
comment period on the notice of petition for rulemaking until March 1,
2019. 84 FR 449 (Jan. 29, 2019).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ All references to EPCA in this document refer to the statute
as amended through America's Water Infrastructure Act of 2018,
Public Law 115-270 (Oct. 23, 2018).
\2\ Standards for non-weatherized residential furnaces were
published in a notice of proposed rulemaking at 80 FR 13120 (March
12, 2015) (Docket No. EERE-2014-BT-STD-0031-0032) and in a
supplemental notice of proposed rulemaking at 81 FR 65720 (Sept. 23,
2016) (Docket No. EERE-2014-BT-STD-0031-0230).
\3\ Standards for commercial water heating equipment were
published in a notice of proposed rulemaking at 81 FR 34440 (May 31,
2016) (Docket No. EERE-2014-BT-STD-0042).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The 90-day public comment period, including the 30-day extension to
submit comments, invited public input in order to better understand
stakeholder perspectives and increase transparency around a complex
issue involving DOE's legal authority. DOE received comments from a
variety of stakeholders, including representatives from gas industry
associations, the manufactured housing industry, efficiency advocates,
consumer advocates, State organizations and Attorneys General, and
individuals (mostly form letter comments). In general, the gas industry
associations and the manufactured housing industry supported the
petition, and the advocates and State officials opposed it.
Specifically, DOE received comment on the notice of petition from:
Air-Conditioning, Heating & Refrigeration Institute
(AHRI);
A.O. Smith Corporation (A.O. Smith);
Appliance Standards Awareness Project (ASAP)/American
Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE)/Alliance to Save Energy
(ASE)/Consumer Federation of America (CFA)/National Consumer Law Center
(NCLC) (ASAP et al. Joint Comment);
California Energy Commission (CEC);
Center for Efficient Living (CEL);
EarthJustice/National Resources Defense Council
(EarthJustice/NRCD Joint Comment);
Emissol LLC;
Indiana Manufactured Housing Association/Recreation
Vehicle Indiana Council (IMHA/RVIC Joint Comment);
Manufactured Housing Industry of Arizona (MHIA);
Manufactured Housing Institute (MHI);
Manufactured & Modular Home Association of Minnesota
(MMHAM);
Mississippi Manufactured Housing Association (MMHA);
Mitsubishi Electric US (Mitsubishi);
Mortex Products, Inc. (Mortex);
National Consumer Law Center/Consumer Federation of
America (NCLC/CFA Joint Comment);
National Electrical Manufacturers Association (NEMA);
National Multifamily Housing Council/National Apartment
Association/National Leased Housing Association (NMHC/NAA/NLHA Joint
Comment);
Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC);
New Mexico Manufactured Housing Association (NMMHA);
Nortek Global HVAC (Nortek);
Northeast Energy Efficiency Partnerships (NEEP);
Northwest Energy Efficiency Alliance (NEEA);
Northwest Energy Efficiency Alliance/Northeast Energy
Efficiency Partnership/Pacific Gas and Electric/National Grid (NEEA/
NEEP/PG&E/National Grid Joint Comment);
Oliver Technologies, Inc.;
Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E)/San Diego Gas and
Electric (SDG&E)/Southern California Edison (SCE) (CA IOUs Joint
Comment);
Plumbing-Heating-Cooling Contractors Association (PHCC);
Rheem Manufacturing Company (Rheem);
Southern Company;
Spire Inc./American Public Gas Association (APGA)/American
Gas Association (AGA)/National Propane Gas Association (NPGA)/Natural
Gas Supply Association (NGSA) (Gas Industry Petitioners Joint Comment);
State Attorneys General (of NY, DC, IL, ME, MA, MN, NJ,
OR, VT, and WA) and Corporation Counsel of New York City (Multi-State
AGs Joint Comment);
Suburban Propane;
Triple-T;
VEIC;
Weil-McLain;
Wisconsin Housing Alliance (WHA), and
22 individuals.
The comments were carefully and fully considered by DOE. DOE is
issuing this notice of proposed interpretive rule to provide the public
additional information about DOE's interpretation of EPCA's
``features'' provision \4\ in the context of condensing vs. non-
condensing furnaces and water heaters, as informed by public comments.
The following sections of this document set forth the relevant legal
authority, describe the Department's historical interpretation of
EPCA's ``features'' provision as applied to condensing vs. non-
condensing products/equipment, provide summary responses to significant
and recurring comments received through the public comment process, and
propose an interpretation of the relevant statutory provision.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See 42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(4); 42 U.S.C.
6313(a)(6)(B)(iii)(II)(aa); 6316(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This proposed interpretive rule does not change or revise any
current policies or legal requirements with respect to residential
furnaces and commercial water heaters. Decisions about whether and how
this interpretation will apply to existing products/equipment utilizing
condensing/non-condensing technology will be the subject of subsequent
actions.
II. Summary Description
A. Relevant Statutory Provisions
In this document, DOE explains its historical interpretation
regarding the evaluation of what constitutes a product ``feature''
which cannot be eliminated under EPCA, specifically in the context of
residential furnaces and commercial water heaters. For covered consumer
products, the key statutory provision at issue can be found at 42
U.S.C. 6295(o)(4), which provides that the Secretary may not prescribe
an amended or new standard under this section if the Secretary finds
(and publishes such finding) that 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.
Where the Secretary finds such ``performance characteristics
(including reliability), features, sizes, capacities, and volumes''
(collectively referred to hereafter as ``features'') to exist, the
statute provides a potential remedy at 42 U.S.C. 6295(q)(1), which
provides that a rule prescribing an energy conservation standard for a
type (or class) of covered products shall specify a level of energy use
or efficiency higher or lower than that which applies (or would apply)
for such type (or class) for any group of covered products which have
the same function or intended use, if the Secretary determines that
covered products within such group--(A) consume a different kind of
energy from that consumed by other covered products within such group
(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 from that which applies
(or will apply) to other products within such type (or class). In
making a determination under 42 U.S.C. 6295(q)(1) concerning whether a
[[Page 33013]]
performance-related feature justifies the establishment of a higher or
lower standard, the Secretary shall consider such factors as the
utility to the consumer of such a feature, and such other factors as
the Secretary deems appropriate.
These provisions also apply to covered non-ASHRAE commercial and
industrial equipment through the provision at 42 U.S.C. 6316(a). (Under
the statute, ``ASHRAE equipment'' refers to small commercial package
air conditioning and heating equipment, large commercial package air
conditioning and heating equipment, very large commercial package air
conditioning and heating equipment, packaged terminal air conditioners,
packaged terminal heat pumps, warm-air furnaces, packaged boilers,
storage water heaters, instantaneous water heaters, or unfired hot
water storage tanks, which are addressed by the ASHRAE in Standard
90.1, Energy Standard for Buildings Except Low-Rise Residential
Buildings.)
ASHRAE equipment has its own separate statutory scheme under EPCA,
with the default situation being that DOE must adopt the level set
forth in ASHRAE Standard 90.1 unless the Department has clear and
convincing evidence to adopt a more-stringent standard (see 42 U.S.C.
6313(a)(6)). Under 42 U.S.C. 6313(a)(6)(B)(iii)(II)(aa), there is a
similar ``features'' provision which provides that the Secretary may
not prescribe an amended standard under the subparagraph if the
Secretary finds (and publishes the finding) that interested persons
have established by a preponderance of the evidence that a standard is
likely to result in the unavailability in the United States in any
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 finding of the Secretary. However, it is
noted that this provision contains the specific limitation that it
applies to an amended standard prescribed under this subparagraph
(i.e., when DOE is acting under its authority to set a more-stringent
standard). There is no companion ``features'' provision under 42 U.S.C.
6313(a)(6)(A), which is the provision that would apply when DOE is
adopting the levels set by ASHRAE. Congress was clearly aware of the
features issue, and it chose to act in the context of DOE standard
setting, but not ASHRAE standard setting. There is likewise no
companion provision to 42 U.S.C. 6295(q)(1) for ASHRAE equipment.
B. DOE's Historical Interpretation
With this statutory background in mind, in the March 12, 2015,
notice of proposed rulemaking (NOPR) for energy conservation standards
for residential furnaces, DOE set forth in detail its rationale for why
it did not considering the venting of non-condensing furnaces to
constitute a product ``feature'' under 42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(4). 80 FR
13120, 13137-13138.
As discussed previously, when evaluating and establishing energy
conservation standards, the statute requires DOE to divide covered
products into product classes by the type of energy used, by capacity,
or by other performance-related features that justify a different
standard. In making a determination whether a performance-related
feature justifies a different standard, DOE must consider factors such
as the utility to the consumer of the feature and other factors DOE
determines are appropriate. (42 U.S.C. 6295(q)) Historically, DOE has
viewed utility as an aspect of the product that is accessible to the
layperson and is based on user operation, rather than performing a
theoretical function. This interpretation has been implemented
consistently in DOE's previous rulemakings by determining utility
through the value the item brings to the consumer, rather than through
analyzing more complicated design features, or costs that anyone,
including the consumer, manufacturer, installer, or utility companies
may bear. DOE reasoned that this approach is consistent with EPCA
requiring a separate and extensive analysis of economic justification
for the adoption of any new or amended energy conservation standard
(see 42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(2)(A)-(B) and (3)).
Under EPCA, DOE has typically addressed consumer utility by
establishing separate product classes or otherwise taken action when a
consumer may value a product feature based on the consumer's everyday
needs. For instance, DOE has determined that it would be impermissible
under 42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(4) to include elimination of oven door windows
as a technology option to improve the energy efficiency of cooking
products.\5\ DOE reached this conclusion based upon how consumers
typically use the product: Peering through the oven window to judge if
an item is finished cooking, as opposed to checking the timer and/or
indicator light or simply opening the oven door to see if the item is
finished cooking. DOE has also determined that consumers may value
other qualities such as ability to self-clean,\6\ size,\7\ and
configuration.\8\ This determination, however, can change depending on
the technology and the consumer, and it is conceivable that certain
products may disappear from the market entirely due to shifting
consumer demand. DOE stated that it has determined such value on a
case-by-case basis through its own research, as well as public comments
received.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ 63 FR 48038, 48041 (Sept. 8, 1998).
\6\ 73 FR 62034, 62048 (Oct. 17, 2008) (separating standard
ovens and self-cleaning ovens into different product classes).
\7\ 77 FR 32307, 32319 (May 31, 2012) (creating a separate
product class for compact front-loading residential clothes
washers).
\8\ 75 FR 59469, 59487 (Sept. 27, 2010) (creating a separate
product class for refrigerators with bottom-mounted freezers).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
DOE offered a cautionary note that disparate products may have very
different consumer utilities, thereby making direct comparisons
difficult and potentially misleading. For instance, in a 2011
rulemaking, DOE created separate product classes for vented and
ventless residential clothes dryers based on DOE's recognition of the
``unique utility'' that ventless clothes dryers offer to consumers. 76
FR 22454, 22485 (April 21, 2011). This utility could be characterized
as the ability to have a clothes dryer in a living area where vents are
impossible to install (i.e., an apartment in a high-rise building). As
explained in that April 2011 direct final rule technical support
document, ventless dryers can be installed in locations where venting
dryers would be precluded due to venting restrictions.
But in another rulemaking, DOE found that water heaters that
utilize heat pump technology did not need to be put in a separate
product class from conventional types of hot water heaters that utilize
electric resistance technology, even though water heaters utilizing
heat pumps require the additional installation of a condensate drain
that a hot water heater utilizing electric resistance technology does
not require. 74 FR 65852, 65871 (Dec. 11, 2009). DOE found that
regardless of these installation factors, the heat pump water heater
and the conventional water heater still had the same utility to the
consumer: Providing hot water. Id. In both cases, DOE made its finding
based on consumer type and utility type, rather than product design
criteria that impact product efficiency. These distinctions in both the
consumer type and the utility type are important because, taken to the
extreme, each design differential could be designated a different
``product class'' and,
[[Page 33014]]
therefore, require different energy conservation standards.
DOE expressed concern that tying the concept of ``feature'' to a
specific technology would effectively lock-in the currently existing
technology as the ceiling for product efficiency and eliminate DOE's
ability to address technological advances that could yield significant
consumer benefits in the form of lower energy costs while providing the
same functionality for the consumer. DOE stated that it was very
concerned that determining features solely on product technology could
undermine the Department's Appliance Standards Program. DOE reasoned
that if it is required to maintain separate product classes to preserve
less-efficient technologies, future advancements in the energy
efficiency of covered products would become largely voluntary, an
outcome which seems inimical to Congress's purposes and goals in
enacting EPCA.
Turning to the product at issue in that rulemaking, DOE noted that
residential furnaces are currently divided into several product
classes. For example, furnaces are separated into product classes based
on their fuel source (gas, oil, or electricity), which is required by
statute. For that rulemaking, DOE analyzed only two product classes for
residential furnaces: (1) Non-weatherized gas-fired furnaces (NWGFs)
and (2) mobile home gas-fired furnaces (MHGFs). DOE did not
additionally separate NWGFs and MHGFs into condensing and noncondensing
product classes.
In that rulemaking, DOE tentatively concluded that the methods by
which a furnace is vented did not provide any separate performance-
related impacts, and, therefore, DOE had no statutory basis for
defining a separate class based on venting and drainage
characteristics. DOE reasoned that NWGF and MHGF venting methods did
not provide unique utility to consumers beyond the basic function of
providing heat, which all furnaces perform. The possibility that
installing a non-condensing furnace may be less costly than a
condensing furnace due to the difference in venting methods did not
justify separating the two types of NWGFs into different product
classes. Unlike the consumers of ventless dryers, which DOE had
determined to be a performance-related feature based on the
impossibility of venting in certain circumstances (e.g., high-rise
apartments), DOE reasoned that consumers of condensing NWGFs are
homeowners that may either use their existing venting or have a
feasible alternative to obtain heat. In other words, homeowners would
still be able to obtain heat regardless of the venting. In contrast,
DOE reasoned that a resident of a high-rise apartment or condominium
building that is not architecturally designed to accommodate vented
clothes dryers would have no option in terms of installing and enjoying
the utility of a dryer in their home unless he or she used a ventless
dryer.
As explained above, DOE's conclusion in the March 12, 2015 NOPR was
that the utility of a furnace involves providing heat to a consumer.
DOE reasoned that such utility is provided by any type of furnace, but
to the extent that a consumer has a preference for a particular fuel
type (e.g., gas), improvements in venting technology may eventually
allow a consumer to obtain the efficiency of a condensing furnace using
the existing venting in a residence by sharing venting space with water
heaters. DOE postulated that this update in technology significantly
would reduce the cost burden associated with installing condensing
furnaces and reduce potential instances of ``orphaned'' water heaters,
where the furnace and water heater can no longer share the same venting
(due to one unit being condensing and the other noncondensing). In
other words, when mature, this technology could allow consumers to
switch from a non-condensing furnace to a condensing furnace in a
greater variety of applications, such as urban row houses. For more
information, interested parties were asked to consult appendix 8L of
the NOPR TSD.
C. The Gas Industry Petition
As noted above, on October 18, 2018, DOE received a petition from
the Gas Industry Petitioners asking DOE to: (1) Issue an interpretive
rule stating that DOE's proposed energy conservation standards for
residential furnaces and commercial water heaters would result in the
unavailability of ``performance characteristics'' within the meaning of
the Energy Policy and Conservation Act of 1975, as amended (i.e., by
setting standards which can only be met by condensing combustion
technology products/equipment) and (2) withdraw the proposed energy
conservation standards for residential furnaces and commercial water
heaters based upon such findings. In their petition, the Gas Industry
Petitioners argue that DOE misinterpreted its mandate under section
325(o)(4) of EPCA by failing to consider as a ``feature'' of the
subject residential furnaces and commercial water heating equipment the
compatibility of a product/equipment with conventional atmospheric
venting systems and the ability to operate without generating liquid
condensate requiring disposal via a plumbing connection. Consequently,
the Gas Industry Petitioners assert that DOE's proposals would make
unavailable non-condensing products/equipment with such features, which
currently exist in the marketplace, in contravention of the statute.
The petition makes a number of technical, legal, and economic arguments
in favor of its suggested interpretation, and it points to DOE's past
precedent related to space constraints and differences in available
electrical power supply (and associated installation costs) as
supporting its call to find that non-condensing technology amounts to a
performance-related ``feature.'' Based upon these arguments, the Gas
Industry Petitioners conclude that DOE should issue an interpretive
rule treating non-condensing technology as a ``feature'' under EPCA,
withdraw its rulemaking proposals for both residential furnaces and
commercial water heaters, and proceed on the basis of this revised
interpretation.
III. Response to Comments
DOE received a number of comments on the Gas Industry Petition with
commenters both supporting the petition for rulemaking and opposing the
petition. Comments from gas industry associations, certain manufacturer
associations, and certain individual manufacturers generally expressed
support for the petition. Comments from efficiency advocacy
organizations, consumer advocacy organizations, other manufacturers,
and certain States and Attorneys General generally oppose it. The
following sections of this proposed interpretive rule summarize the
comments received on the Gas Industry Petition and provide DOE's
responses to those comments. DOE then proposes an interpretation
consistent with its statutory authority and that considers the comments
received along with all other available information. To aid in
organizing the comments, this section categorizes public comments on
the Gas Industry Petition in terms of legal authority, technical
matters, implementation, and other related issues.
A. Legal Authority
As DOE explained in section II.B of this document, for the purpose
of EPCA, DOE has in prior instances considered product/equipment
``features'' in the context of the consumer's interaction with the
appliance in question. With the submission of the Gas Industry
Petition, DOE is re-evaluating its prior
[[Page 33015]]
interpretations in the context of the petition and providing
stakeholders and the interested public an opportunity to submit
comments and information to further inform DOE's consideration,
particularly in regards to its technical implications, as well as the
needs of consumers (including those with low incomes).
DOE is issuing the interpretation as an interpretative rule within
the meaning of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA). 5 U.S.C. 551(4),
553(b). DOE is publishing a proposed interpretation to solicit comment
and to provide the public with a clear and transparent explanation of
DOE's view of a specific legal question: Whether non-condensing
technology and associated venting constitutes a performance-related
``feature'' under 42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(4),\9\ as would support a separate
product/equipment class under 42 U.S.C. 6295(q)(1),\10\ including the
authority that Congress conferred on DOE through those provisions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ 42 U.S.C. 6316(a) for non-ASHRAE equipment; 42 U.S.C.
6313(a)(6)(B)(iii)(II)(aa) for ASHRAE equipment where DOE is setting
more-stringent standards.
\10\ 42 U.S.C. 6316(a) for non-ASHRAE equipment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Legal Authority To Set Separate Product/Equipment Classes Based Upon
Condensing and Non-Condensing Technologies
The Gas Industry petition raises the issue of whether non-
condensing technology, including the associated venting, constitutes a
``performance characteristic'' or ``feature'' under 42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(4), and if it is so, whether it justifies a separate product/
equipment class under 42 U.S.C. 6295(q)(1). Commenters had divergent
views regarding DOE's legal authority to determine non-condensing
technology used in furnaces and water heaters, including the associated
venting, is a ``performance characteristic'' or ``feature'' within the
meaning of the statute, and whether as a ``performance characteristic''
or ``feature'' it would justify a separate product/equipment class and
standard. Such views are summarized in the immediately following
paragraphs.
Comments from the gas industry, certain manufacturers, housing
associations, and a number of individuals generally supported the
interpretation of ``performance characteristic'' and ``feature'' put
forth in the Gas Industry Petition (i.e., non-condensing technology and
the associated venting is a ``performance characteristic'' for the
purpose of EPCA), arguing that DOE is statutorily prohibited from
adopting standards that would effectively eliminate this performance
characteristic. (Gas Industry Petitioners Joint Comment, No. 44 at pp.
1 and 3; Mortex, No. 58 at p. 1; Weil-McLain, No. 29 at p. 1; PHCC, No.
53 at p. 1; Southern Company, No. 33 at p. 1; Suburban Propane, No. 13
at p. 1; Nortek, No. 35 at pp. 1 and 2; NMHC/NAA/NLHA Joint Comment,
No. 41 at p. 1; Baker, No. 4 at p. 1; Matchneer, No. 21 at p. 1) These
commenters emphasized the point presented in the Gas Industry Petition
that the ability to use category I venting \11\ and to operate without
formation of condensate are performance characteristics and/or features
that DOE cannot eliminate under EPCA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ Category I venting has a non-positive vent pressure and is
suitable for non-condensing appliances.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Southern Company asserted that non-condensing furnaces and water
heaters provide ``unique utility'' in terms of their ability to
commonly vent with other gas appliances, vent into masonry chimneys,
operate in unconditioned space without freeze protection, easily
install in retrofit applications, and operate without the need to
dispose of condensate. (Southern Company, No. 33 at p. 2) Nortek stated
that an energy conservation standard that requires the use of
condensing technology would eliminate the ability to combine the
venting of other non-condensing appliances with the furnace or
commercial water heater. (Nortek, No. 35 at p. 2) NMHC, NAAA, and NLHA
stated that in the context of existing multifamily properties,
installation of a condensing unit may require construction of an
entirely new ventilation system within the apartment to meet the
horizontal venting requirements of the condensing furnace unit, and in
many properties, there is not sufficient clearance on the exterior wall
of the property to locate a ventilation pipe due to existing windows
and doors. (NMHC/NAA/NLHA Joint Comment, No. 41 at p. 2) Regarding
commercial hot water heaters, Rheem stated that according to the Energy
Information Agency (EIA) 2012 Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption
Survey (CBECS) data, more than half of all commercial buildings were
constructed before condensing commercial water heaters were introduced
to the market and that in older buildings having greater than 3-stories
with the water heater(s) located in the interior of the building
structure, it is generally difficult, if not impossible, to replace
non-condensing water heaters with condensing water heaters due
primarily to the need to replace or reline existing vents/chimneys.
(Rheem, No. 34 at p. 2) Southern Company further commented that non-
condensing units can be installed in unconditioned space without the
use of potentially dangerous heat tapes or other devices that prevent
condensate from freezing. (Southern Company, No. 33 at p. 4)
Several of the commenters in support of the Gas Industry Petition
asserted that there is precedent for establishing separate product
classes for non-condensing furnaces and water heaters. (Gas Industry
Petitioners Joint Comment, No. 44 at pp. 5-6; Mortex, No. 58 at p. 2;
Southern Company, No. 33 at pp. 2-4; Nortek, No. 35 at p. 2; MHI, No.
54 at p. 2) The Gas Industry Petitioners stated that the issues facing
the replacement of a non-condensing unit with a condensing unit are
similar, but greater in magnitude, to installation issues for products
that DOE has established separate ``space-constrained'' product
classes. (Gas Industry Petitioners Joint Comment, No. 44 at pp. 4-5)
Southern Company specifically referenced as applicable precedent the
separate product classes established for gas-fired natural draft
commercial packaged boilers, the standard-size equipment class for
package terminal air conditioners and heat pumps, space-constrained
central air conditioners and heat pumps, tabletop water heaters, and
compact products such as clothes dryers. (Southern Company, No. 33 at
pp. 3-4) Mortex and Southern Company pointed to the establishment of
separate classes of furnace fans based on use in a condensing versus
non-condensing furnace as support for establishing separate classes as
requested in the Gas Industry Petition. (Mortex, No. 58 at p. 2;
Southern Company, No. 33 at p. 3)
Various other commenters opposed the Gas Industry Petition and
asserted that the method of venting, type of type of vent, and
condensate disposal system associated with a furnace or water heater
does not qualify as a performance-related characteristic or feature
under EPCA. (CA IOUs Joint Comment, No. 45 at pp. 1-2; EarthJustice/
NRDC Joint Comment, No. 55 at p. 1; Mitsubishi, No. 10 at p. 1; Multi-
State AGs Joint Comment, No. 49 at pp. 1-2, 6; NEMA, No. 46 at p. 4;
NEEA, No. 59 at pp. 1-2; CEC, No. 56 at pp. 1-2 ; NCLC/CFA Joint
Comment, No. 50 at pp. 1-2; ASAP et al. Joint Comment, No. 61 at p. 4)
Referencing DOE's prior, tentative analysis of the issue under EPCA,
commenters stated that condensing and non-condensing furnaces and water
heaters provide
[[Page 33016]]
identical performance characteristics in the form of warm air or hot
water, respectively; that installation cost is not a performance
characteristic for the purpose of 42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(4); and that non-
condensing technology does not justify a separate product class. (CA
IOUs Joint Comment, No. 45 at pp. 2-3; EarthJustice/NRDC Joint Comment,
No. 55 at pp. 5 and 13; Multi-State AGs Joint Comment, No. 49 at p. 7;
NEEA, No. 59 at p. 5; CEC, No. 56 at p. 2; CEL, No. 3 at p. 1; NCLC/CFA
Joint Comment, No. 50 at p. 5; ASAP et al. Joint Comment, No. 61 at p.
4) NEMA stated that increased cost of installation is not a performance
characteristic or feature under paragraphs 42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(4) and
(q)(1). (NEMA, No. 46 at pp. 4, 11) NEMA further stated that while the
type of venting may be a ``characteristic'' or ``feature,'' it is not
one that has utility to the consumer; the consumer suffers no loss of
utility by no longer being able to use a ``type B'' metal vent with a
condensing furnace. (NEMA, No, 46 at pp. 15-16) While NEMA agreed with
the result of DOE's tentative determination, NEMA cautioned that DOE
should not exclusively conflate an appliance's ``basic function'' with
a useful feature, capacity, characteristic, size, or volume. (NEMA, No.
46 at p. 17)
EarthJustice and NRDC argued that Congress intended the provision
at 42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(4) only to address the possibility that efficiency
standards could completely destroy the market for a covered product.
(EarthJustice/NRDC Joint Comment, No. 55 at p. 3) Additionally,
EarthJustice and NRDC asserted that the difference in language between
42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(4) and 42 U.S.C. 6313(a)(6)(iii)(II)(aa) indicates
that ``performance characteristic'' means something different for
residential products and commercial equipment. Specifically, this
comment imparts significant meaning to Congress's placement of a single
parentheses within these two statutory provisions; on the residential
side, 42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(4) describes ``performance characteristics'' as
``(including reliability)'' and then following with ``features, sizes,
capacities, and volumes,'' but on the commercial side, 42 U.S.C.
6313(a)(6)(B)(iii)(II)(aa) describes ``performance characteristics'' as
``(including reliability, features, sizes, capacities, and volumes).''
(EarthJustice/NRDC Joint Comment, No. 55 at p. 4) EarthJustice and NRDC
continued that the method of venting and condensate disposal are not
performance features under either provision, but ``installation
features.'' (EarthJustice/NRDC Joint Comment, No. 55 at p. 4)
A number of commenters stated that not every technology design
option should be captured as a separate ``performance characteristic''
or ``feature,'' because such approach would preclude DOE from ever
setting incrementally more stringent energy conservation standards. (CA
IOUs Joint Comment, No. 45 at p. 3; NRDC, No. 60 at p. 4, 6-7; Multi-
State AGs Joint Comment, No. 49 at p. 7; A.O. Smith, No. 51 at p. 3;
CEC, No. 56 at p. 1) Commenters asserted that the appropriate precedent
is DOE's prior determination in the residential water heater rulemaking
in which DOE determined that heat pump heaters provide hot water to a
residence just as a traditional electric storage water heater does,
and, therefore, a standard level that effectively bans electric
resistance heating does not violate 42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(4). (CA IOUs
Joint Comment, No. 45 at p. 3; NEMA, No. 46 pp. 7-8)
In opposition to the petition, commenters further stated that to
the extent that there are installation cost differences between the
venting technologies, those costs should be addressed in DOE's economic
analysis and are not relevant to the determination of product/equipment
classes. (CA IOUs Joint Comment, No. 45 at pp. 3-4; EarthJustice/NRDC
Joint Comment, No. 55 at p. 7; NRDC, No. 60 at p. 8; ASAP et al. Joint
Comment, No. 61 at pp. 3-4) EarthJustice and NRDC did state that DOE
appropriately established separate product classes for through-the-wall
central air conditioners and heat pumps to avoid requiring changes in
the physical size of the through-the-wall systems and modifications to
the buildings in which they are installed. (EarthJustice/NRDC Joint
Comment, No. 55 at p. 10-11)
A number of commenters stated that with rare exceptions, condensing
furnaces and water heaters are no more difficult to install than non-
condensing units, and they added that in the small number of situations
where there are difficulties, there are work-arounds. (Mitsubishi, No.
10 at pp. 1-2, 6; Multi-State AGs Joint Comment, No. 49 at p. 8; NEEP,
No. 48 at p. 1; NEEA, No. 59 at pp. 1-2; CEC, No. 56 at p. 3; A.O.
Smith, No. 51 at p. 4; Triple-T, No. 63 at p. 1) NEEA and the State
Attorneys General provided the summary of a survey of residential
furnace installers, based on which they stated that the percentage of
homes with the conditions necessary to present significant issues is
likely to be less than 5 percent of the retrofit installations. (NEEA,
No. 59 at p. 2; Multi-State AGs Joint Comment, No. 49 at p. 8) The
State Attorneys General added that those interviewed for the survey
stated that even in ``difficult'' cases, technical solutions are
possible. (Multi-State AGs Joint Comment, No. 49 at p. 8) Mitsubishi
stated that cases where installation of condensing equipment is more
difficult than replacing with non-condensing equipment are rare, and it
estimated that such conditions exist in less than 1 percent of the
total housing stock. (Mitsubishi, No. 10 at p. 4) The CEC identified a
commercially-available product (i.e., FasNSeal 80/90 by DuraVent) that
allows for combined venting of an atmospheric appliance and a
condensing appliance, thereby mitigating the issue of ``orphaned''
water heaters. (CEC, No. 56 at p. 3)
In response, DOE recognizes the importance of its interpretation of
``performance characteristic'' and ``feature'' in the context of
condensing vs. non-condensing furnaces, water heaters, and similarly
situated products/equipment. The submission of comments and other
information pursuant to the Gas Industry Petition has heightened DOE's
awareness of the real world impacts facing consumers of such products/
equipment. In the past, DOE viewed venting of condensing vs. non-
condensing as a technological and economic issue incidental to the
appliance's purpose of providing heat or hot water to a dwelling or
business. DOE has now come to see that it may have been too narrow in
its focus. Commenters have made persuasive arguments that a consumer's
interaction with and perception of a furnace or water heater may go
beyond its primary function.
For example, adoption of an energy conservation standard requiring
the use of condensing technology could potentially impact a home's
aesthetics, if a new installation or retrofit were to entail additional
venting in the conditioned space. Consumers would likely notice the new
venting, and it might deprive them of some enjoyment related to the
appearance of their home. In other cases, the condensing furnace may be
of a different size or shape, and it may require modifications to
existing utility closets or similarly constrained spaces, again
potentially impacting the aesthetics of a room's layout. To that
extent, non-condensing appliances may be similar to the space-
constrained appliances which EarthJustice and NRDC point to in their
comments as an appropriate use of EPCA's features provision. (DOE
requests comments regarding any size-related impacts of the use of
condensing technology, such as
[[Page 33017]]
that related to the need for more heat exchanger surface area.)
Although DOE continues to believe that the distinction between
condensing and non-condensing appliances is largely a matter of
economics for most consumers, for some subset of the population, it is
something much more than that. As commenters representing the
manufactured housing industry and individual owners of such units made
clear, energy conservation standards at condensing levels could price
some low-income consumers out of the housing market entirely. Below
that level, other low-income consumers could face a financial hardship
once they are forced to purchase a condensing furnace, which on average
for mobile home gas furnaces costs between $152 and $331 (total
installed cost; 2015$) more than a non-condensing furnace.\12\
(Consistently, DOE's data support the finding in the fuel switching
analysis of the September 23, 2016 supplemental notice of proposed
rulemaking (September 2016 SNOPR) that accounted for instances where
installation of a condensing furnace was either too difficult or
costly, with the result being substitution of another type of heating
product. 81 FR 65720, 65791-65793 (Sept. 23, 2016) (see also Chapter 8J
of the SNOPR technical support document (TSD)). For such consumers,
there could be difficult choices to be made between heat and other
necessities such as food or medical care. The potential for overall
energy savings after a long payback period does little to ameliorate
such short-term impacts. In light of these reasons, DOE has tentatively
concluded that the totality of such concerns may raise non-condensing
appliances (and their associated venting) sufficiently in the
consciousness of the consumer as to be deemed a ``feature'' under EPCA.
DOE does not believe that its proposed interpretation would have a
cascading effect that would prevent it from ever setting a standard
that would eliminate a less-efficient technology; instead, DOE would
continue to determine ``features'' based upon consumer utility on a
case-by-case basis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ See chapter 8 of the September 2016 SNOPR TSD for
Residential Furnaces (Available at: https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=EERE-2014-BT-STD-0031-0217).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Legal Authority To Set a ``Small'' Furnaces Product Class for Mobile
Home Furnaces
Manufactured housing associations, certain manufacturers to the
manufactured housing industry, and a number of individuals faulted
DOE's 2016 furnaces SNOPR (81 FR 65720 (Sept. 23, 2016)) for its
failure to consider a ``small'' mobile home furnaces product class. Due
to the cost impacts to manufactured housing consumers and these
consumers' sensitivity to price increases, these commenters argued that
DOE should have considered a ``small'' product class for mobile home
furnaces. According to these commenters, manufactured housing is
disproportionately impacted due to the comparatively high number of
manufactured homes that rely on non-condensing gas furnaces as compared
to site-built homes, as well as the disproportionate number of homes in
the south where the payback of a high-efficiency furnace is less. (MHI,
No. 54 at pp. 1, 3-4; MMHAM, No. 43 at p. 2; MMHA, No. 42 at p. 2;
IMHA-RVIC, No. 32 at p. 2; NMMHA, No. 28 at pp. 1-2; WHA, No. 24 at pp.
1-2; MHIA, No. 23 at p. 2; Oliver Technologies, No. 16 at p. 1; Mortex,
No. 58 at p. 2; Individuals, Nos. 17-22, 25-27, 30-31, 36-40, 47, 57 at
pp. 1-2)
In the September 2016 furnaces SNOPR, DOE explained its rationale
for proposing that energy conservation standards for mobile home gas
furnaces should be set at 92 percent annual fuel utilization efficiency
(AFUE). 81 FR 65720, 65743-65744 (Sept. 23, 2016). First, DOE stated
that under the proposed standard, 63 percent of mobile home gas
furnaces (MHGFs) would see a net benefit from such standards, whereas
only 8 percent would experience a net cost. DOE anticipated minimal
fuel switching, because for new mobile homes, the type of heating
equipment tends to be determined by the intended location of the home,
the expected heating load, and the availability of a gas supply. For
replacement applications, DOE found that switching away from gas is not
likely because the cost increase for installing a condensing furnace
relative to a non-condensing furnace is not a significant factor due to
a much simpler venting system compared to installation of a non-
weatherized gas furnace (NWGF). Id. at 81 FR 65743. As to the costs,
DOE's analyses determined that the expected average cost of a
condensing furnace in a new mobile home is comparable to a non-
condensing furnace, because the increase in the price of the product is
offset by a lower installation cost for a condensing furnace for most
installations.\13\ The SNOPR noted that new furnaces installed in
mobile homes must be approved by the U.S. Department of Housing and
Urban Development, which requires special sealed combustion (direct
vent) for all non-condensing and condensing installations of
manufactured home furnaces. (24 CFR 3280.709(d)(1)) For condensing
installations, the polyvinyl chloride (PVC) piping is usually less
expensive than the metal vent system used for non-condensing furnaces.
Thus, DOE reasoned that there is not likely to be any effect on the
affordability of single-section mobile homes due to the SNOPR's
proposed MHGF standard. Id. at 81 FR 65744.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ In the SNOPR, DOE stated that the standard for MHGF furnace
fans requires technology (improved PSC motor) that entails a slight
price increase ($11) in 2013$ compared to the baseline PSC motor
(see furnace fan energy conservation standards final rule; available
at: https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=EERE-2010-BT-STD-
0011-0117). This cost is applicable to less than 50 percent of
installations because the rest of the market is already comprised of
MHGFs with improved PSC motors or motors with higher efficiencies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nevertheless, to the extent DOE moves to consider non-condensing
furnaces and water heaters (and associated ductwork) to be a
``feature'' under EPCA, these commenters' concerns should be resolved,
because mobile home purchasers would retain the choice of purchasing a
furnace using non-condensing or condensing technology.
B. Fuel Switching
A number of commenters expressed concern that a national condensing
furnaces standard would drive fuel switching and/or extend the use of
less efficient appliances, because consumers who cannot afford more-
expensive condensing technology will choose to switch to a non-gas
heating option, repair their existing gas furnace, or use other less-
efficient means of heating such as space heaters. (Gas Industry
Petitioners Joint Comment, No. 44 at p. 3; MHI, No. 54 at p. 5; PHCC,
No. 53 at p. 2; NMHC/NAA/NLHA Joint Comment, No. 41 at p. 2)
In contrast, the CEC argued that fuel switching is a cost impact,
not a utility impact, as it does not disrupt service to the consumer of
warm air or hot water. (CEC, No. 56 at p. 3) The CEC also stated that
the costs related to fuel switching were included in DOE's life-cycle
cost analysis in the September 2016 SNOPR for residential furnaces.
(CEC, No. 56 at p. 3)
EarthJustice and NRDC stated that fuel switching is not an obstacle
to amended standards under EPCA. These commenters noted that for small
gas furnaces, EPCA required that DOE prescribe energy conservation
standards at a level ``which the Secretary determines is not likely to
result in a
[[Page 33018]]
significant shift from gas heating to electric resistance heating with
respect to either residential construction or furnace replacement,''
and asserted that Congress could have easily extended this requirement
to other gas products but did not. EarthJustice and NRDC stated that,
therefore, Congress did not intend to prevent the adoption of standards
that may lead consumers to change their space or water heating energy
sources. These commenters further argued that Congress's instruction to
avoid fuel-switching in the initial small furnaces rulemaking would be
superfluous if other parts of the statute were already intended to
prohibit fuel switching. (EarthJustice/NRDC Joint Comment, No. 55 at
pp. 8-9)
As the commenters noted, DOE addressed the potential for fuel
switching in the September 2016 SNOPR. 81 FR 65720, 65723, and Chapter
8 of the September 2016 SNOPR Technical Support Document (TSD).\14\ DOE
agrees with the CEC, EarthJustice, and NRDC that concerns about fuel
switching alone or in isolation would probably not justify a
determination that non-condensing appliances (and associated venting)
constitute a ``feature'' deserving a separate product/equipment class
under EPCA. However, for the reasons previously stated, DOE has
tentatively concluded that the choice of purchasing a non-condensing
appliance is something that matters to some significant portion of
consumers (especially persons with low-incomes), with concerns ranging
from impacts on the aesthetics of the home to overall choice of housing
options. To the extent DOE determines non-condensing technology (and
associated venting) to be a feature, any fuel switching among such
appliances going forward will be voluntary on the part of the consumer
and not driven by government regulation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ The September 2016 SNOPR TSD is available at https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=EERE-2014-BT-STD-0031-0217.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Analytical Issues
Some commenters raised concerns with the analytical methodology
underlying DOE's rulemakings for residential furnaces and commercial
water heaters. (Gas Industry Petitioners Joint Comment, No. 44 at pp.
12-13; Rheem, No. 34 at pp. 2-3; NMHC/NAA/NLHA Joint Comment, No. 41 at
p. 2; Weil McLain, No. 29 at p. 1) Among the issues raised by these
commenters were that the national average approach to economic
justification fails to consider the excessive localized costs that are
certain to be incurred if non-condensing performance characteristics
are eliminated. (Weil McLain, No. 29 at pp. 1-2)
DOE has attempted in prior residential furnaces and commercial
water heaters rulemakings to capture localized effects (e.g., regional
climate, local utility rates, building type, local contractor labor
rates, high-cost installations) in the life-cycle cost (LCC) analyses.
DOE presented the average LCC results in summary form in the September
23, 2016 SNOPR. 81 FR 65720, 65814-65816. In chapter 8 of the September
23, 2016 furnaces SNOPR TSD, DOE presented the results in charts
showing the mean and median LCC savings, along with the 5th, 25th,
75th, and 95th percentiles, to demonstrate the impacts of more extreme
cases (both positive and negative). The same type of analysis was
conducted for commercial water heaters in the May 31, 2016 NOPR. 81 FR
34440, 34482-34488.
Commenters also asserted that there is a fundamental flaw in DOE's
modeling approach in that the base-case distribution of efficiencies is
assigned randomly, rather than accounting for some consumers making
economically rational decisions. (Gas Industry Petitioners Joint
Comment, No. 44 at pp. 11-12) In response, DOE would point out that the
base-case efficiency distributions for residential furnaces and
commercial water heaters are not entirely random. For furnaces,
assignment of efficiency in the base-case was based on both the region
and specific building in which it is installed, with the market shares
of furnace efficiencies first assigned by region based on historical
shipments data and then allocated to specific buildings within each
region based on the existing furnace being replaced. For commercial
water heaters, the no-new-standards case and the selections in the LCC
model were also not completely random, and rather were based on
distributions of models in DOE's database, which included all
commercially-available equipment on the market at the time and which
(due to the absence of shipments data) represented the best data
available to DOE at the time.
Furthermore, Rheem suggested that the EIA 2003 CBECS data used in
DOE's commercial water heaters proposal is outdated, and DOE should
recalculate results using more up-to-date data and re-evaluate its
proposed standards accordingly. (Rheem, No. 34 at p. 2) In response,
DOE notes that CBECS 2003 was the most recent version available at the
time the analysis was conducted for the notice of proposed rulemaking
for commercial water heating equipment. In any potential future
rulemaking documents for commercial water heating equipment, DOE would
update its analysis to utilize the most recent version of CBECS
(currently the 2012 version).
The National Multifamily Housing Council (NMHC), the National
Apartment Association (NAA), and the National Leased Housing
Association (NLHA) commented that DOE did not include an adequate
analysis of the venting and condensate disposal system installation
costs for multi-story, multi-family properties in its proposals. (NMHC/
NAA/NLHA Joint Comment, No. 41 at p. 2) In response, DOE notes that
requirements specific to multi-story, multi-family properties were
considered in the LCC analyses for residential furnaces and commercial
water heating equipment. DOE acknowledged that multi-family buildings
may require additional measures to replace non-condensing furnaces with
condensing furnaces, noted that it did not find data that would allow a
reliable estimation of the associated costs, and, therefore, requested
comment on the issue. 81 FR 65720, 65778. DOE estimated in the
September 23, 2016 SNOPR that more than 60 percent of replacement
multi-family NWGF installations would not be impacted by the proposed
standard. 81 FR 65720, 65780. For commercial water heaters, in the May
2016 NOPR, DOE included RECS data for multi-family buildings in the
building sample used for its analysis, in order to account for the
unique venting requirements of multi-family buildings, such as the vent
length. 81 FR 34440, 34482 (May 31, 2016).\15\
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\15\ See chapter 8 and Appendix 8-D of the Commercial Water
Heating Equipment NOPR TSD for further discussion. Available at:
https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=EERE-2014-BT-STD-0042-0016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rheem stated that efficiency standards for commercial water heaters
that require condensing technology could lead to fuel switching or
multiple residential water heaters as alternatives, and suggested that
DOE should consider such costs as part of the life-cycle cost analysis
for commercial water heaters. (Rheem, No. 34 at p. 3) As discussed in
the May 2016 NOPR, DOE considered whether to model fuel switching in
the analysis for commercial water heating equipment and tentatively
determined that fuel switching would be unlikely to occur. 81 FR 34440,
34494 (May 31, 2016).
[[Page 33019]]
Finally, Southern Company argued that DOE's analysis for
residential furnaces grossly overestimates the capabilities of DuraVent
FNS 80/90 as a technological solution, because it does not allow a
condensing appliance to operate with the same utility as a non-
condensing model due to restrictions on the circumstances in which it
can be used. (Southern Company, No. 33 at pp. 6-8)
DOE clarifies that it considered use of the DuraVent FasNSeal (FNS)
80/90 only as a sensitivity analysis; DOE's main analysis does not
assume that the DuraVent FNS 80/90 would be used in any installations.
Because of the uncertainty regarding applicability of FNS 80/90 and
other new venting technologies, and lack of available field data on
such venting installations, DOE has consistently maintained its
approach of only using this option in a sensitivity analysis rather
than its main analysis. In this sensitivity analysis, DOE only applied
the FNS80/90 option to installations that could meet the FNS 80/90
installation requirements. While the previously noted comment from the
CEC identified the FNS 80/90 (CEC, No. 56 at p. 3) as a means to
address orphaned water heaters, the technology is only commercially
available for applications with metal vents, and as pointed out by
Southern, can only be used in certain situations where the vent can be
installed at the appropriate angle to drain condensate. To address
stakeholders' concerns regarding overestimating the number of
installations that could use new venting technologies, DOE plans to
include an additional sensitivity analysis in any potential future
rulemaking documents for furnaces, where the FNS 80/90 option is
applied to installations that can currently meet the FNS 80/90
installation requirements.
Finally, DOE notes that in its February 2019 NOPR regarding
proposed changes to its Process Rule, the Department has announced its
plans to conduct a peer review of its suite of rulemaking analyses as a
second phase to the revisions of its Process Rule. 84 FR 3910, 3936-
3938 (Feb. 13, 2019). Thus, DOE anticipates an ongoing discussion about
potential refinements to its analytical methodologies and modeling,
including those issues raised by commenters on the Gas Industry
Petition.
D. Consumer Impacts
A number of efficiency and consumer advocacy organizations and the
State Attorneys General argued that granting the requests in the Gas
Industry Petition would negatively impact consumers due to lost energy
and cost savings. (NEEP, No. 48 at p. 1; NEEA, No. 59 at p. 3; NCLC/
CFA, No. 50 at pp. 2-3; Multi-State AGs Joint Comment, No. 49 at pp. 9-
10; ASAP et al. Joint Comment, No. 61 at pp. 1-3) The State Attorneys
General also asserted that such action would disrupt State and local
energy and climate goals. (Multi-State AGs Joint Comment, No. 49 at pp.
9-10) The Center for Efficient Living argued that the Gas Industry
Petitioners do not represent the parties most directly impacted by the
regulations at issue, as compared to consumers and manufacturers, but
instead, DOE must recognize the significant advances in heating,
ventilation, and air-conditioning technology in the past 10 years and
not take actions which counteract the associated public health, indoor
air quality (IAQ), and environmental benefits. (CEL, No. 3 at p. 1)
In contrast, individual commenters who support manufactured housing
stated that Federal regulation should encourage manufactured housing as
an affordable ownership option, but DOE's proposal inhibits that by
increasing new home or retrofit costs, thereby potentially pricing
consumers out of the manufactured housing market. These commenters
stated that the median household income of manufactured homeowners is
$30,000, which makes them very sensitive to any change in first cost of
a new home or retrofit costs (e.g., reworking existing utility closets
due to larger units). It was also noted that there is no exemption or
other accommodation for ``small'' furnaces, which are often used in
manufactured homes. (Matchneer et al. (Form Comments), Nos. 17-22, 25-
27, 30-31, 36-40, 47, 57 at p. 1)
As discussed, in establishing and amending energy conservation
standards, EPCA prescribes a number of factors that DOE must consider.
These factors include the savings in operating costs throughout the
estimated average life of the covered product compared to any increase
in the price of, or in the initial charges for, or maintenance expenses
of, the covered products which are likely to result from a standard.
(42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(2)(B)(i)(II)) DOE historically has accounted for and
considered the potential energy savings to consumers through the LCC
and PBP analyses in all of its rulemakings. In contrast, however,
EPCA's ``features'' provision demonstrates that Congress intended
certain aspects of products with consumer utility to be preserved
despite the energy savings or other benefits that might result from
their elimination. (42 U.S.C. 6295(o)(4); 42 U.S.C.
6313(a)(6)(B)(iii)(II)(aa); 42 U.S.C. 6316(a)) DOE recognizes the
important policy concerns raised by these commenters, but the
Department is constrained to act within its statutory authority. Thus,
to the extent DOE interprets EPCA's ``features'' provision as
supporting separate products/equipment classes for condensing and non-
condensing appliances, the concerns of commenters regarding the
affordability of manufactured housing are largely resolved. For other
consumers, DOE will account for them as part of the standard-setting
process and develop energy conservation standards that meet the seven
criteria for economic justification, are technologically feasible, and
produce significant energy savings, as required by EPCA. DOE would note
that for consumers who rent (including low-income consumers), energy
savings from mandatory energy conservation standards set at condensing
levels are likely to be offset, at least in part, by higher rents to
cover the landlord/owner's first cost of the more expensive appliance.
E. Other Issues
Comments from the State Attorneys General and certain efficiency
advocacy organizations commented that other nations such as Canada and
the United Kingdom have successfully adopted and implemented
regulations requiring condensing technology. (CEC, No. 56 at p. 3;
Multi-State AGs Joint Comment, No. 49 at p. 8; ASAP et al. Joint
Comment, No. 61 at p. 4) In response, DOE acknowledges both the energy
savings potential of condensing appliances and the adoption of related
regulatory requirements by other nations such as Canada and the U.K.
However, DOE must act in accordance with domestic law (i.e., EPCA) in
formulating energy conservation standards, complying with all relevant
requirements, including the features provision.
Additionally, the State Attorneys General argued that granting the
Gas Industry Petition would impermissibly further delay DOE's
publication of final rule for the products/equipment in question, rules
which EPCA requires DOE to publish within two years after a proposal.
The commenters pointed out that DOE's statutory deadlines for
promulgating final furnace and water heater standards expired in March
2017 and May 2018, respectively. (Multi-State AGs Joint Comment, No. 49
at pp. 4-6) In response, DOE remains cognizant of its legal deadlines
and plans to act expeditiously to comply with its mandates pursuant to
EPCA. At the
[[Page 33020]]
same time, the Gas Industry Petitioners have the right to petition for
rulemaking under the Administrative Procedure Act, which provides that
``[e]ach agency shall give an interested person the right to petition
for the issuance, amendment, or repeal of a rule.'' 5 U.S.C. 553(e).
DOE is not at liberty to pick and choose among its legal obligations,
but instead it must comply with all applicable legal requirements. In
this case, DOE must evaluate and respond to the Gas Industry Petition
and then implement any revised interpretation in the context of its
ongoing rulemaking obligations.
IV. DOE's Proposed Revised Interpretation
In consideration of public comments and other information received
on the Gas Industry Petition, DOE proposes to revise its interpretation
of EPCA's ``features'' provision in the context of condensing and non-
condensing technology used in furnaces, water heating equipment, and
similarly-situated appliances (where permitted by EPCA). Based on those
comments, DOE prospectively interprets the statute to provide that
adoption of energy conservation standards that would limit the market
to natural gas and/or propane gas furnaces, water heaters, or similarly
situated products/equipment (where permitted by EPCA) that use
condensing combustion technology would result in the unavailability of
a performance related feature within the meaning of 42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(4) and 42 U.S.C. 6313(a)(6)(B)(iii)(II)(aa) and 42 U.S.C.
6316(a).
The statute accords the Secretary of Energy considerable discretion
in terms of determining whether a performance characteristic of a
covered product/equipment amounts to a performance-related feature
which cannot be eliminated through adoption of an energy conservation
standard. DOE has taken the opportunity presented by the Gas Industry
Petition to reconsider its historical interpretation of EPCA's
``features'' provision in the context of condensing and non-condensing
technologies used by certain gas appliances. Contrary to the
petitioners' assessment, DOE found this to be a close case, with
persuasive arguments on both sides of the issue. However, a number of
factors have convinced DOE to revise its interpretation.
First, DOE acknowledges that it has, in the past, taken space
constraints and similar limitations into account when setting product
classes (e.g., PTACs, ventless clothes dryers). For example, DOE was
sensitive to the costs associated with requiring expensive building
modifications when it decided to set separate equipment classes for
standard size PTACs and non-standard size PTACs. 73 FR 58772 (Oct. 7,
2008). DOE expects that similar expenses would occur here, if DOE were
to hold to its historical interpretation, at least for some subset of
installations. Although limited data were provided to address the
actual costs that consumers and commercial customers would face to
modify their existing category I venting, there is little doubt that
some number of such installations would be quite costly. These more
complicated/costly installations are documented as part of DOE's
analysis of the venting costs for residential furnaces, which
considered potential venting modifications that could be required when
replacing an existing category I furnace with a condensing (category
IV) furnace (see appendix 8D of the 2016 SNOPR TSD for further
details).
Second, DOE has in the past focused on the consumer's interaction
with the product/equipment in deciding whether a performance feature is
at issue. In the context of residential furnaces and commercial water
heaters, DOE has focused on the primary function of the appliance
(e.g., providing heat to a home or potable hot water) in establishing
the nexus to the consumer. In the past, DOE opined that consumers were
only interested in obtaining heat or hot water from the appliance, so
they would not care about the mechanism for generating that end
product. However, commenters have made clear that in at least some
cases, the physical changes associated with a condensing appliance may
change a home's aesthetics (e.g., by adding new venting into the living
space or decreasing closet or other storage space), thereby impacting
consumer utility even under DOE's prior approach.
Third, DOE notes that it has been its policy to remain neutral
regarding competing energy sources in the marketplace. As certain
commenters have pointed out and as DOE's own analyses have shown, some
enhanced level of fuel switching is likely to accompany standard
setting using DOE's prior interpretation. Many consumers who are
currently gas customers may show a proclivity for that fuel type and
would be negatively impacted by a standard that requires the purchase
of a condensing unit to the extent they feel compelled to change to a
different fuel type. DOE seeks neither to determine winners and losers
in the marketplace nor to limit consumer choice.
Finally, DOE is very concerned about ensuring energy affordability,
particularly for persons with low incomes. Although energy efficiency
improvements may pay for themselves over time, there is a significant
increase in first-cost associated with furnaces and water heaters using
condensing technology. For consumers with difficult installation
situations (e.g., inner-city row houses), there would be the added cost
of potentially extensive venting modifications. In certain cases,
commenters have argued that accommodating condensing products may not
even be possible. Although DOE continues to believe that costs are
properly addressed in the economic analysis portion of its rulemakings,
it remains cognizant of such issues. DOE has tentatively concluded that
the other reasons discussed immediately above are sufficient in and of
themselves to justify the Department's proposed change in
interpretation, but it acknowledges these cost impacts in order to be
fully transparent in terms of the agency's thinking.
Creating separate product classes for condensing and non-condensing
furnaces, water heaters, and similarly situated products/equipment
(where permitted by EPCA) would prevent many of these potential
problems. Although DOE's proposed revised approach may have some impact
on overall energy saving potential as a result of establishing separate
product/equipment classes, that is not the touchstone of EPCA's
``features'' provision; through that provision, Congress expressed its
will that certain product utilities will take priority over additional
energy savings measures. (For example, DOE did not eliminate the oven
window which consumers found useful, despite the potential for further
energy savings.) With that said, DOE believes that any potentially
negative programmatic impacts of its revised interpretation are likely
to be limited. This interpretation is likely to impact only a limited
set of appliances, and DOE notes that market trends have favored the
growing reach of condensing furnaces, even as non-condensing
alternatives have remained available. DOE has every reason to believe
that such trends will continue.
DOE would clarify the limitations of its proposed revised
interpretation, based upon the existing statutory provisions. As
discussed previously, DOE can effect this change for all relevant
consumer products, all non-ASHRAE commercial and industrial equipment,
and ASHRAE equipment in those instances where DOE has clear and
convincing evidence to adopt levels higher than the levels in ASHRAE
Standard 90.1.
[[Page 33021]]
As noted, additional, subsequent DOE action is required before the
interpretation in this proposed interpretive rule can be implemented.
This proposed interpretive rule, therefore, does not alter the
Department's current regulations. This interpretation does not and will
not be used to abrogate DOE's responsibilities under existing laws or
regulations, nor does it change DOE's existing statutory authorities or
those of its regulators at the Federal, State, or local level. DOE
anticipates continued engagement and productive involvement of members
of the public and the regulated community in subsequent activities that
may follow this interpretation.
V. Conclusion
As discussed immediately above, DOE is granting the Gas Industry
Petition to the extent that it prospectively interprets the statute to
provide that adoption of energy conservation standards that would limit
the market of natural gas and/or propane gas furnaces, water heaters,
or similarly situated products/equipment (where permitted by EPCA) that
use condensing combustion technology would result in the unavailability
of a performance related feature within the meaning of 42 U.S.C.
6295(o)(4) and 42 U.S.C. 6313(a)(6)(B)(iii)(II)(aa) and 42 U.S.C.
6316(a). Such interpretation would apply to all applicable residential
products, non-ASHRAE commercial equipment, and ASHRAE equipment where
DOE adopts a level more stringent than the ASHRAE level.
DOE is denying the Gas Industry Petition as it pertains to those
rulemakings where ASHRAE sets standard levels that trigger DOE to
consider and adopt those level (unless DOE finds clear and convincing
evidence to adopt more-stringent levels), due to lack of authority. DOE
is also denying the Gas Industry Petition's request for DOE to withdraw
the proposed rules for residential furnaces and commercial water
heaters as unnecessary. If this interpretive rule is finalized, DOE
anticipates developing supplemental notices of proposed rulemaking
(SNOPRs) that would implement the new legal interpretation for those
two rulemakings.
Through this interpretive rule, DOE states its understanding of the
best interpretation of the statutory text in light of the language and
purposes of EPCA, so as to be consistent with Congress's direction. In
light of further consideration and the information presented with and
in response to the Gas Industry Petition, DOE's position has evolved,
and it has tentatively concluded that this revised interpretation is
the best reading of EPCA's ``features'' provision. This interpretation
does not, by itself, change existing applicable DOE regulations or
policies regarding individual appliance standards rulemakings.
Implementation of this interpretation in the context of energy
conservation standards for particular products or equipment, and any
changes to existing policies that may be appropriate in light of this
interpretation will be the subject of subsequent actions.
DOE wishes to make clear that an interpretative rule is a type of
rule or regulation within the meaning of those terms in the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. 551(4). It is well
established under the APA that agencies have the authority to issue
interpretative rules, and that these rules are a valuable tool for an
agency to use to advise the public prospectively and in a clear and
transparent manner of the agency's construction of a statute it
administers. As such, an interpretative rule does not have force and
effect on its own. It is not until the agency takes an action in which
the interpretation is applied that the interpretation can have an
effect and, even then, only through that subsequent action.
When DOE considers this statutory interpretation in the context of
taking any action in the future with regard to energy conservation
standards rulemakings, it will evaluate its policies to determine if
any require revision to accommodate this interpretation, and if so, DOE
will follow applicable procedures to make any necessary changes.
However, DOE's legal interpretations do not themselves constitute
agency action.
DOE's interpretation does not have legal effect on its own. As
appropriate, the public will be notified and have an opportunity to
comment on any such proposals implementing the interpretation.
Furthermore, the many substantive comments received, including comments
that led to revisions of DOE's interpretation of the ``features''
provision,'' as reflected in this proposed interpretive rule, indicate
that the public had a meaningful opportunity to comment on DOE's
general interpretation. As DOE has indicated, there will be additional
processes after the interpretation has been issued but before any
rulemaking decisions are implemented.
VI. Public Participation
Submission of Comments
DOE invites all interested parties to submit in writing by the date
listed in the DATES section of this document, comments and information
regarding this proposed interpretive rule.
Submitting comments via https://www.regulations.gov. The https://www.regulations.gov web page will require you to provide your name and
contact information prior to submitting comments. Your contact
information will be viewable to DOE Building Technologies staff only.
Your contact information will not be publicly viewable except for your
first and last names, organization name (if any), and submitter
representative name (if any). If your comment is not processed properly
because of technical difficulties, DOE will use this information to
contact you. If DOE cannot read your comment due to technical
difficulties and cannot contact you for clarification, DOE may not be
able to consider your comment.
However, your contact information will be publicly viewable if you
include it in the comment or in any documents attached to your comment.
Any information that you do not want to be publicly viewable should not
be included in your comment, nor in any document attached to your
comment. Persons viewing comments will see only first and last names,
organization names, correspondence containing comments, and any
documents submitted with the comments.
Do not submit to https://www.regulations.gov information for which
disclosure is restricted by statute, such as trade secrets and
commercial or financial information (hereinafter referred to as
Confidential Business Information (CBI)). Comments submitted through
https://www.regulations.gov cannot be claimed as CBI. Comments received
through the website will waive any CBI claims for the information
submitted. For information on submitting CBI, see the Confidential
Business Information section.
DOE processes submissions made through https://www.regulations.gov
before posting. Normally, comments will be posted within a few days of
being submitted. However, if large volumes of comments are being
processed simultaneously, your comment may not be viewable for up to
several weeks. Please keep the comment tracking number that https://www.regulations.gov provides after you have successfully uploaded your
comment.
Submitting comments via email, hand delivery, or postal mail.
Comments and documents via email, hand delivery, or postal mail will
also be posted to https://www.regulations.gov. If you do not want
[[Page 33022]]
your personal contact information to be publicly viewable, do not
include it in your comment or any accompanying documents. Instead,
provide your contact information on a cover letter. Include your first
and last names, email address, telephone number, and optional mailing
address. The cover letter will not be publicly viewable as long as it
does not include any comments.
Include contact information in your cover letter each time you
submit comments, data, documents, and other information to DOE. If you
submit via postal mail or hand delivery, please provide all items on a
CD, if feasible, in which case it is not necessary to submit printed
copies. No telefacsimiles (faxes) will be accepted.
Comments, data, and other information submitted electronically
should be provided in PDF (preferred), Microsoft Word or Excel,
WordPerfect, or text (ASCII) file format. Provide documents that are
not secured, written in English, and free of any defects or viruses.
Documents should not include any special characters or any form of
encryption, and, if possible, they should carry the electronic
signature of the author.
Campaign form letters. Please submit campaign form letters by the
originating organization in batches of between 50 to 500 form letters
per PDF or as one form letter with a list of supporters' names compiled
into one or more PDFs. This reduces comment processing and posting
time.
Confidential Business Information. Pursuant to 10 CFR 1004.11, any
person submitting information that he or she believes to be
confidential and exempt by law from public disclosure should submit via
email, postal mail, or hand delivery two well-marked copies: One copy
of the document marked ``Confidential'' including all the information
believed to be confidential, and one copy of the document marked ``Non-
confidential'' with the information believed to be confidential
deleted. Submit these documents via email or on a CD, if feasible. DOE
will make its own determination about the confidential status of the
information and treat it according to its determination.
Factors of interest to DOE when evaluating requests to treat
submitted information as confidential include: (1) A description of the
items; (2) whether and why such items are customarily treated as
confidential within the industry; (3) whether the information is
generally known by or available from other sources; (4) whether the
information has previously been made available to others without
obligation concerning its confidentiality; (5) an explanation of the
competitive injury to the submitting person which would result from
public disclosure; (6) when such information might lose its
confidential character due to the passage of time, and (7) why
disclosure of the information would be contrary to the public interest.
It is DOE's policy that all comments may be included in the public
docket, without change and as received, including any personal
information provided in the comments (except information deemed to be
exempt from public disclosure).
DOE considers public participation to be a very important part of
its process for considering regulatory actions. DOE actively encourages
the participation and interaction of the public during the comment
period. Interactions with and between members of the public provide a
balanced discussion of the issues and assist DOE in determining how to
proceed with a regulatory action. Anyone who wishes to be added to DOE
mailing list to receive future document and information about this
matter should contact Appliance and Equipment Standards Program staff
at (202) 287-1445 or via email at
[email protected].
VII. Approval of the Office of the Secretary
The Secretary of Energy has approved publication of this document
granting in part and denying in part the relevant petition for
rulemaking and issuing a proposed interpretive rule.
Signed in Washington, DC, on June 28, 2019.
Daniel R. Simmons,
Assistant Secretary, Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy.
[FR Doc. 2019-14553 Filed 7-10-19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P