California bans energy-eating TVs
California regulators have banned certain kinds of flat-screen TVs to meet energy-efficiency requirements. Stacey Vanek-Smith reports.
A customer looks over flat-panel televisions at a Best Buy store. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)
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Kai Ryssdal: California banned television sets today. Not all of 'em. Just the big flat screens that use lots of energy. And not right away, either. This afternoon, California regulators decided that starting year after next flat screens sold out here will have to meet new efficiency standards. Those requirements get more strict by 2013.
California says it's just trying to control power use. But the entire industry could wind up playing by the new rules, as Marketplace's Stacey Vanek-Smith reports.
STACEY VANEK-SMITH: Consumers are keeping a tight hold on their wallets this holiday season. One thing they are buying, though? Flat-screen TVs.
Riddh Patel is an analyst with the research firm iSuppli. She says sales of the sets this holiday season will be up around 14 percent over last year.
RIDDH PATEL: This is a product that consumers are willing to spend money on because entertainment has become really important.
Competition for those consumer dollars is cut-throat. The average price for a flat-screen set is roughly half what it was last year. And now California's energy-efficiency mandate is about to turn the industry on its head, says Yankee Group researcher Carl Howe.
CARL HOWE: It may reshape the market because California's such a big part of the economy -- 13 percent of the entire U.S. economy comes from California.
Howe says California's energy-efficiency requirements will probably mean fewer plasma TVs; they use a lot more power than LCD sets. California's new rules dictate televisions have to consume about a third less energy by 2011.
I'm Stacey Vanek-Smith for Marketplace.








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From bristol, PA, 12/28/2009
California is a perfect example of "No good deed goes unpunished". CA has the strictest energy efficiency standards in the U.S. but it pays a huge cost for being that way. It is high time that other states adopt rules as implemented by CA without being blind sided by the short term economic benefits of not having such rules.
From Prescott, AZ, 11/18/2009
We have a 42" plasma screen, but there's a simple solution to curbing its energy draw--switching it completely off when it is not in use. We have the set and DVD player plugged into a surge protector, so when not in use, everything goes off.
Since we only use the set to watch DVDs a few times a week, the energy savings adds up quick.
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