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Cold or hot wash: How technological choices would lead to cultural change and potential increase in clothes washing energy use in ChinaJiang Lin and Maithili Iyer, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Keywordsenergy efficiency, clothes washing, cultural practices, efficiency standards AbstractUsage pattern of clothes washing (and clothes washers) are strongly related to local cultural practices. Such practices have led to the development of distinctive clothes washing technologies in US, Europe, and Japan. In the emerging markets such as China, several types of technologies often co-exist. Some use less energy but more water (the impeller type), and some use more energy but less water (the horizontal axis type, often with built-in water heaters). The competition between different technologies is thought to lead to better consumer choices. However, it could also lead to changes in clothes washing habits – from cold to hot wash, and therefore to much higher energy use. This paper examines the standards development process in China, the largest appliance producer and market in the world, to illustrate that adoption of foreign technologies and technical standards, if not carefully calibrated to the local cultural practices, could have unintended consequences for energy use and environment. PaperDownload this paper as pdf: 6022Lin.fm.pdf | CalendarCall for papers deadline - eceee 2012 Industry Summer Study 28 Feb – 02 Mar 2012World Sustainable Energy Days 2012 29 Feb – 02 Mar 2012Australia's first energy efficiency summer study 01 – 02 Mar 2012WSED - Energy Efficiency Watch: Nearly zero energy buildings 22 – 24 Mar 2012Workshop on energy & society 28 – 30 Mar 20128th South-East European Congress & Exhibition on Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy 28 – 30 Mar 2012South-East European Conference & Exhibition "SAVE the Planet" - Waste Management & Recycling, Environment |