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ENGROSSED SUBSTITUTE HOUSE BILL 2758
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State of Washington60th Legislature2008 Regular Session

By House Technology, Energy & Communications (originally sponsored by Representatives Morris, Morrell, and Hudgins)

READ FIRST TIME 02/05/08.   



     AN ACT Relating to adding products to the energy efficiency code; amending RCW 19.260.030, 19.260.040, and 19.260.050; and adding a new section to chapter 19.260 RCW.

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:

Sec. 1   RCW 19.260.030 and 2006 c 194 s 2 are each amended to read as follows:
     (1) This chapter applies to the following types of new products sold, offered for sale, or installed in the state: (a) Automatic commercial ice cube machines; (b) commercial clothes washers; (c) ((commercial prerinse spray valves; (d))) commercial refrigerators and freezers; (((e) metal halide lamp fixtures; (f))) (d) single-voltage external AC to DC power supplies; (((g))) (e) state-regulated incandescent reflector lamps; ((and (h))) (f) unit heaters; (g) wine chillers for use by an individual; (h) illumination of remote reach-in cabinets, cabinets without doors, and wine chillers that are not consumer products; (i) hot water dispensers and minitank electric water heaters; (j) bottle-type water dispensers and point-of-use water dispensers; (k) pool heaters, residential pool pumps, and portable electric spas; (l) tub spout diverters; and (m) commercial hot food holding cabinets. This chapter applies equally to products whether they are sold, offered for sale, or installed as a stand-alone product or as a component of another product.
     (2) This chapter does not apply to (a) new products manufactured in the state and sold outside the state, (b) new products manufactured outside the state and sold at wholesale inside the state for final retail sale and installation outside the state, (c) products installed in mobile manufactured homes at the time of construction, or (d) products designed expressly for installation and use in recreational vehicles.

Sec. 2   RCW 19.260.040 and 2006 c 194 s 3 are each amended to read as follows:
     The legislature establishes the following minimum efficiency standards for the types of new products set forth in RCW 19.260.030.
     (1)(a) Automatic commercial ice cube machines must have daily energy use and daily water use no greater than the applicable values in the following table:

Equipment typeType of coolingHarvest rate
(lbs. ice/24 hrs.)
Maximum
energy use
(kWh/100 lbs.)
Maximum condenser
water use
(gallons/100 lbs. ice)
Ice-making headwater<5007.80 - .0055H200 - .022H
>500<14365.58 - .0011H200 - .022H
>14364.0200 - .022H
Ice-making headair45010.26 - .0086HNot applicable
>4506.89 - .0011HNot applicable
Remote condensing but not remote compressorair<10008.85 - .0038Not applicable
>10005.10Not applicable
Remote condensing and remote compressorair<9348.85 - .0038HNot applicable
>9345.3Not applicable
Self-contained modelswater<20011.40 - .0190H191 - .0315H
>2007.60191 - .0315H
Self-contained modelsair<17518.0 - .0469HNot applicable
>1759.80Not applicable
Where H harvest rate in pounds per twenty-four hours which must be reported within 5% of the tested value. "Maximum water use" applies only to water used for the condenser.

     (b) For purposes of this section, automatic commercial ice cube machines shall be tested in accordance with ARI 810-2003 test method as published by the air-conditioning and refrigeration institute. Ice-making heads include all automatic commercial ice cube machines that are not split system ice makers or self-contained models as defined in ARI 810-2003.
     (2) Commercial clothes washers must have a minimum modified energy factor of 1.26. For the purposes of this section, capacity and modified energy factor are defined and measured in accordance with the current federal test method for clothes washers as found at 10 C.F.R. Sec. 430.23.
     (3) ((Commercial prerinse spray valves must have a flow rate equal to or less than 1.6 gallons per minute when measured in accordance with the American society for testing and materials' "Standard Test Method for Prerinse Spray Valves," ASTM F2324-03.
     (4)
))(a) Commercial refrigerators and freezers must meet the applicable requirements listed in the following table:

Equipment TypeDoorsMaximum Daily Energy Consumption (kWh)
Reach-in cabinets, pass-through cabinets, and roll-in or roll-through cabinets that are refrigeratorsSolid0.10V+ 2.04
Transparent0.12V+ 3.34
Reach-in cabinets, pass-through cabinets, and roll-in or roll-through cabinets that are "pulldown" refrigeratorsTransparent.126V+ 3.51
Reach-in cabinets, pass-through cabinets, and roll-in or roll-through cabinets that are freezersSolid0.40V+ 1.38
Transparent0.75V+ 4.10
Reach-in cabinets that are refrigerator-freezers
with an AV of 5.19 or higher
Solid
0.27AV - 0.71
kWh kilowatt hours
V total volume (ft3)
AV adjusted volume [1.63 x freezer volume (ft3)]+ refrigerator volume (ft3)

     (b) For purposes of this section, "pulldown" designates products designed to take a fully stocked refrigerator with beverages at 90 degrees F and cool those beverages to a stable temperature of 38 degrees F within 12 hours or less. Daily energy consumption shall be measured in accordance with the American national standards institute/American society of heating, refrigerating and air-conditioning engineers test method 117-2002, except that the back-loading doors of pass-through and roll-through refrigerators and freezers must remain closed throughout the test, and except that the controls of all appliances must be adjusted to obtain the following product temperatures.

Product or compartment typeIntegrated average product temperature in degrees Fahrenheit
Refrigerator38+ 2
Freezer0+ 2

     (((5) Metal halide lamp fixtures designed to be operated with lamps rated greater than or equal to 150 watts but less than or equal to 500 watts shall not contain a probe-start metal halide lamp ballast.
     (6)
)) (4)(a) Single-voltage external AC to DC power supplies shall meet the requirements in the following table:

Nameplate outputMinimum Efficiency in Active Mode
< 1 Watt0.49 * Nameplate Output
> or 1 Watt and < or 49 Watts0.09 * Ln (Nameplate Output)+ 0.49
> 49 Watts0.84
Maximum Energy Consumption in No-Load Mode
< 10 Watts0.5 Watts
> or 10 Watts and < or 250 Watts
0.75 Watts
Where Ln (Nameplate Output) - Natural Logarithm of the nameplate output expressed in Watts

     (b) For the purposes of this section, efficiency of single-voltage external AC to DC power supplies shall be measured in accordance with the United States environmental protection agency's "Test Method for Calculating the Energy Efficiency of Single-Voltage External AC to DC and AC to AC Power Supplies," by Ecos Consulting and Power Electronics Application Center, dated August 11, 2004.
     (((7))) (5)(a) The lamp electrical power input of state-regulated incandescent reflector lamps shall meet the minimum average lamp efficacy requirements for federally regulated incandescent reflector lamps contained in 42 U.S.C. Sec. 6295(i)(l)(A)-(B).
     (b) The following types of incandescent lamps are exempt from these requirements:
     (i) Lamps rated at fifty watts or less of the following types: BR 30, ER 30, BR 40, and ER 40;
     (ii) Lamps rated at sixty-five watts of the following types: BR 30, BR 40, and ER 40; and
     (iii) R 20 lamps of forty-five watts or less.
     (((8))) (6) Unit heaters must be equipped with intermittent ignition devices and must have either power venting or an automatic flue damper.
     (7) Wine chillers designed and sold for use by an individual must not exceed the applicable requirements listed in the following table:

Equipment TypeMaximum Annual Appliance Energy Consumption (kWh)
Wine chillers with manual defrost13.7V + 267
Wine chillers with automatic defrost17.4V + 344
V = volume in ft3.


     (8) The internal illumination of the following appliances, manufactured on or after January 1, 2009, shall be only by (a) T-8 fluorescent lamps with electronic ballasts, or (b) a lighting system that has no fewer lumens per watt than a system using only T-8 fluorescent lamps with electronic ballasts:
     (i) Remote reach-in cabinets with transparent doors, remote pass-through cabinets with transparent doors, and remote roll-in or roll-through cabinets with transparent doors;
     (ii) Cabinets without doors; and
     (iii) Wine chillers that are not consumer products.
     (9) The standby energy consumption of bottle-type water dispensers, and point-of-use water dispensers, dispensing both hot and cold water, manufactured on or after January 1, 2009, shall not exceed 1.2 kWh/day.
     (10)(a) The standby loss of hot water dispensers and minitank electric water heaters manufactured on or after January 1, 2009, shall be not greater than 35 watts.
     (b) This subsection does not apply to any water heater:
     (i) That is within the scope of 42 U.S.C. Sec. 6292(a)(4) or 6311(1)(F);
     (ii) That has a rated storage volume of less than 20 gallons; and
     (iii) For which there is no federal test method applicable to that type of water heater.
     (11) The following standards are established for pool heaters, residential pool pumps, and portable electric spas:
     (a) Natural gas pool heaters shall not be equipped with constant burning pilots.
     (b) Pool pump motors shall meet the following standards:
     (i) Pool pump motors manufactured on or after January 1, 2009, may not be split-phase or capacitor start -- induction run type.
     (ii) Pool pump motors with a capacity of 1 HP or more which are manufactured on or after January 1, 2009, shall have the capability of operating at two or more speeds with a low speed having a rotation rate that is no more than one-half of the motor's maximum rotation rate.
     (iii) Pool pump motor controls manufactured on or after January 1, 2009, shall have the capability of operating the pool pump at at least two speeds. The default circulation speed shall be the lowest speed, with a high speed override capability being for a temporary period not to exceed one normal cycle.
     (c) The standby power of portable electric spas manufactured on or after January 1, 2009, shall be not greater than 5(V2/3) watts where V = the total volume, in gallons.
     (12)(a) The leakage rate of tub spout diverters shall be no greater than the applicable requirements shown in the following table:


Maximum Leakage Rate
ApplianceTesting ConditionsEffective January 1, 2009
When new0.01 gpm
Tub spout divertersAfter 15,000 cycles of diverting0.05 gpm


     (b) Showerhead-tub spout diverter combinations shall meet both the standard for showerheads and the standard for tub spout diverters.
     (13) The idle energy rate of commercial hot food holding cabinets manufactured on or after January 1, 2009, shall be no greater than 40 watts per cubic foot of measured interior volume.

Sec. 3   RCW 19.260.050 and 2006 c 194 s 4 are each amended to read as follows:
     (1) No new ((commercial prerinse spray valve,)) commercial clothes washer, commercial refrigerator or freezer, state-regulated incandescent reflector lamp, or unit heater manufactured on or after January 1, 2007, may be sold or offered for sale in the state unless the efficiency of the new product meets or exceeds the efficiency standards set forth in RCW 19.260.040. No new automatic commercial ice cube machine((,)) or single-voltage external AC to DC power supply, ((or metal halide lamp fixtures)) manufactured on or after January 1, 2008, may be sold or offered for sale in the state unless the efficiency of the new product meets or exceeds the efficiency standards set forth in RCW 19.260.040.
     (2) On or after January 1, 2008, no new ((commercial prerinse spray valve,)) commercial clothes washer, commercial refrigerator or freezer, single-voltage external AC to DC power supply, state-regulated incandescent reflector lamp, or unit heater manufactured on or after January 1, 2007, may be installed for compensation in the state unless the efficiency of the new product meets or exceeds the efficiency standards set forth in RCW 19.260.040. On or after January 1, 2009, no new automatic commercial ice cube machine ((or metal halide lamp fixtures)) manufactured on or after January 1, 2008, may be installed for compensation in the state unless the efficiency of the new product meets or exceeds the efficiency standards set forth in RCW 19.260.040.
     (3) Standards for ((metal halide lamp fixtures and)) state-regulated incandescent reflector lamps are effective on the dates in subsections (1) and (2) of this section.
     (4) The following products, if manufactured on or after January 1, 2009, may not be sold or offered in the state unless the efficiency of the new product meets or exceeds the efficiency standards set forth in RCW 19.260.040:
     (a) Wine chillers for use by an individual;
     (b) Illumination of remote reach-in cabinets, cabinets without doors, and wine chillers that are not consumer products;
     (c) Hot water dispensers and minitank electric water heaters;
     (d) Bottle-type water dispensers and point-of-use water dispensers;
     (e) Pool heaters, residential pool pumps, and portable electric spas;
     (f) Tub spout diverters; and
     (g) Commercial hot food holding cabinets.
     (5) The following products, if manufactured on or after January 1, 2009, may not be installed for compensation in the state on or after January 1, 2010, unless the efficiency of the new product meets or exceeds the efficiency standards set forth in RCW 19.260.040:
     (a) Wine chillers for use by an individual;
     (b) Illumination of remote reach-in cabinets, cabinets without doors, and wine chillers that are not consumer products;
     (c) Hot water dispensers and minitank electric water heaters;
     (d) Bottle-type water dispensers and point-of-use water dispensers;
     (e) Pool heaters, residential pool pumps, and portable electric spas;
     (f) Tub spout diverters; and
     (g) Commercial hot food holding cabinets.

NEW SECTION.  Sec. 4   A new section is added to chapter 19.260 RCW to read as follows:
     By July 1, 2009, the energy policy division of the department of community, trade, and economic development shall adopt by rule minimum energy efficiency standards for new consumer audio and video equipment that are consistent with standards adopted by states on the west coast with similar minimum energy efficiency standards.

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