eceee
EceISS12_907AD_22mars.gif 

 RSS Feed

Buy Summer Study proceedings

Proceedings.gif

Savings Potential of Energy Star® External Power Adapters and Battery Chargers

Carrie Webber, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
David Korn, The Cadmus Group
Marla Sanchez, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Keywords

Abstract

External power adapters may lose 10 to 70 percent of the energy they consume, dissipated as heat rather than converted into useful energy. Battery charging systems have more avenues for losses: in addition to power conversion losses, power is consumed by the charging circuitry, and additional power may be needed after the battery is full charged to balance selfdischarge.

In 2005, the Environmental Protection Agency launched a new ENERGY STAR® label for external power supplies (EPSs) that convert line-voltage AC electricity into low-voltage DC electricity for certain electronic devices. The specification included power supplies for products with battery charging functions (e.g. laptops and cell phones), but excluded others. In January 2006, a separate specification was issued for battery charging systems contained primarily in small household appliances and power tools. In addition to the ENERGY STAR label, the state of California will implement minimum energy performance standards for EPSs in 2007, and similar standards for EPSs and battery chargers are in development at the national level.

Many of the products covered by these policies use relatively little power and have modest per-unit savings potential compared to conventional energy efficiency targets. But with an estimated 1.5 billion adapters and 230 million battery charging systems in use in the United States, the aggregate savings potential is quite high. This paper presents estimates of the savings potential for external power adapters and battery charging systems through 2025.

Paper

Download this paper as pdf: 250_235.pdf

Panels of the 2006 ACEEE Summer Study on Energy Efficiency in Buildings

Panel 1. Residential Buildings: Technologies, Design, Performance Analysis, and Building Industry Trends

Panel 2. Residential Buildings: Program Design, Implementation, and Evaluation

Panel 3. Commercial Buildings: Technologies, Design, Performance Analysis, and Building Industry Trends

Panel 4. Commercial Buildings: Program Design, Implementation, and Evaluation

Panel 5. Utility Regulation and Competition: Incentives, Strategies, and Policies

Panel 6. Market Transformation: Designing for Lasting Change

Panel 7. Human and Social Dimensions of Energy Use: Trends and Their Implications

Panel 8. Changing the Climate for Energy Efficiency: Local, National, and International Policy Dimensions

Panel 9. Appliances, Lighting, Information Technologies, Consumer Electronics, and Miscellaneous End Uses

Panel 10. Roundtables and Interactive Sessions: Learning by Doing

Panel 11. Efficient Communities

Panel 12. Energy Conversations

EcoDesign.gifSpringer.gif

European Directives:
Dedicated pages
and policy briefs

Directives.gif