Energy Star-t Your Engines

Massive fraud in the EPA/DOE Energy Star Program. Automated system allows fake products to get approval.

Above - a WUWT original: 4 cycle alarm clock

WASHINGTON — Does a “gasoline-powered alarm clock” qualify for the EnergyStar label, the government stamp of approval for an energy-saving product?

Like more than a dozen other bogus products submitted for approval since last June by Congressional auditors posing as companies, it easily secured the label, according to a Congressional report to be issued Friday. So did an “air purifier” that was essentially an electric space heater with a feather duster pasted on top, the Government Accountability Office said.

See photo below

This piece of junk got an Energy Star Rating!

In a nine-month study, four fictitious companies invented by the accountability office also sought EnergyStar status for some conventional devices like dehumidifiers and heat pump models that existed only on paper. The fake companies submitted data indicating that the models consumed 20 percent less energy than even the most efficient ones on the market. Yet those applications were mostly approved without a challenge or even questions, the report said.

Auditors concluded that the EnergyStar program was highly vulnerable to fraud.

Maria Vargas, an official with the Environmental Protection Agency, which runs the program with the Energy Department, said the approvals did not pose a problem for consumers because the products never existed. There was “no fraud,” Ms. Vargas emphasized. She said she doubted that many of the 40,000 genuine products with EnergyStar status had been mislabeled.

Yet auditors found problems beyond the approval of nonexistent products. They determined that once a company registered as an EnergyStar partner, it could download the logo from the government’s Web site and paste it on products for which it had not even requested approval.

The report is only the latest in a series involving the 18-year-old EnergyStar program, which was set up to guide the public on energy-efficient choices that could both save people money and help reduce the nation’s runaway energy consumption.

Watchdogs within the Environment Protection Agency and the Department of Energy have reported in the past that Energy Star has taken some claims of energy efficiency on faith. Yet the new study suggests that it often does so on remote control.

Congressional auditors said they were told by EnergyStar officials that some of the approvals, including the one for the gasoline alarm clock, had been issued by an automated system and that the details had probably never been reviewed by a human being.

Read the rest at the New York Times here.

A full report is available at the GAO:

Summary web page here.

Highlights PDF here

Detailed report PDF here

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Larry Fields
March 27, 2010 4:47 pm

This news story reminds me of the EPA’s inflated fuel efficiency ratings for cars in the recent past. If you wanted real numbers, you had to read Consumer Reports, which isn’t tainted by gummint funding. CR does their own testing, and it involves real cars on real roads.
However in all fairness, it’s my understanding that the EPA has become more honest in this one specific area. Maybe the read CR!

March 27, 2010 8:35 pm

I pictured a turbine powered clock my self, not that old tech piston power one!
what a joke on me….. I just picked up a new fridge and freezer and looked at the “star” ratings thinking I was doing a good thing….oh well…. I got the one I wanted any who.
Tim L.

Bill Thomson
March 27, 2010 9:34 pm

That little gas powered alarm clock is nothing compared to the alarm clock I used to use. Mine was powered by a big yellow Caterpillar diesel engine! And that’s the truth.
When I was in my late teens I spent one fall worked on an oilrig in northern British Columbia. On chilly nights when the rig was drilling through hard rock and hands weren’t needed on the drilling floor, we would disappear into the pump room and sleep on top of the enormous pump that pumped the drilling mud down into the hole. The diesel engine in the room was so loud that you couldn’t hear someone yell from even a few feet away. We would just sleep away absorbing the warmth from the top of the pump with the noise from the engine almost deafening us. We would wake up the instant the engine slowed down and scramble up to the drilling floor to be ready to add a new piece of drill pipe. It was kind of a reverse alarm clock but it worked perfectly.

FTM
March 28, 2010 4:12 am

I can’t say or add anything to this discussion that hasn’t already been said or added. I might suggest a little kindness, consideration and compassion for a class of people that are obviously suffering from the most severe mental illness yet encountered by the human race.

Rejean Gagnon
March 29, 2010 5:33 am

I bought a laptop recently and it had a sticker on it which has the Energy Star logo on it – but then goes on to say that it only applies to some specific models. You can be sure it does not apply to my model, as I have a penchant for laptops with huge screens.