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Report to Congressional Requesters: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

GAO: 

January 2007: 

Energy Efficiency: 

Long-standing Problems with DOE's Program for Setting Efficiency 
Standards Continue to Result in Forgone Energy Savings: 

GAO-07-42: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-07-42, a report to congressional requesters 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The Department of Energy (DOE) sets energy efficiency standards through 
the rulemaking process for certain consumer product categories, such as 
kitchen ranges, and industrial equipment, such as distribution 
transformers. Congress reported in 2005 that DOE was late in setting 
standards and required DOE to report every 6 months on the status of 
the backlog. 

GAO examined (1) the extent to which DOE has met its obligations to 
issue rules on minimum energy efficiency standards for consumer 
products and industrial equipment and (2) whether DOE’s plan for 
clearing the backlog will be effective or can be improved. Among other 
things, GAO convened an expert panel on energy efficiency standards to 
identify causes and effects of delays and assess DOE’s plans. 

What GAO Found: 

DOE has missed all 34 congressional deadlines for setting energy 
efficiency standards for the 20 product categories with statutory 
deadlines that have passed. DOE’s delays ranged from less than a year 
to 15 years. Rulemakings have been completed for only (1) 
refrigerators, refrigerator-freezers, and freezers; (2) small furnaces; 
and (3) clothes washers. DOE has yet to finish 17 categories of such 
consumer products as kitchen ranges and ovens, dishwashers, and water 
heaters, and such industrial equipment as distribution transformers. 
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory estimates that delays in setting 
standards for the four consumer product categories that consume the 
most energy––refrigerators and freezers, central air conditioners and 
heat pumps, water heaters, and clothes washers––will cost at least $28 
billion in forgone energy savings by 2030. DOE’s January 2006 report to 
Congress attributes delays to several causes, including an overly 
ambitious statutory rulemaking schedule and a lengthy internal review 
process. In interviews, however, DOE officials could not agree on the 
causes of delays. GAO’s panel of widely recognized, knowledgeable 
stakeholders said, among other things, that the General Counsel review 
process was too lengthy and that DOE did not allot sufficient resources 
or make the standards a priority. However, GAO could not more 
conclusively determine the root causes of delay because DOE lacks the 
program management data needed to identify bottlenecks in the 
rulemaking process. 

In January 2006, DOE presented to Congress its plan to bring the 
standards up to date by 2011. It is unclear whether this plan will 
effectively clear DOE’s backlog because DOE does not have the necessary 
program management data to be certain the plan addresses with certainty 
the root causes. The plan also lacks critical elements of an effective 
project management plan, such as a way to ensure management 
accountability for meeting the deadlines. Finally, the plan calls for a 
sixfold increase in workload with only a small increase in resources. 
DOE plans to manage the workload through improved productivity. 

Figure: Timeliness of DOE Rulemakings That Have Come Due: 

[See PDF for Image] 

Source: GAO analysis of DOE data. 

[End of figure] 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO recommends that DOE adopt elements of effective project management 
in its standards rulemaking, such as using a more transparent process 
and allocating adequate resources within its appropriation. In 
commenting on this report, DOE did not respond to the recommendations 
but said it was incorrect to single out any official or office for the 
delays and that the report did not reflect many of its standards-
setting activities since EPAct 2005. GAO reported several causes of 
delays; activities since EPAct 2005 were outside this report’s scope. 

[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-07-42]. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Jim Wells at (202)512-
3841 or wellsj@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

DOE Has Missed All Rulemaking Deadlines at a Cost of Billions in 
Forgone Energy Savings: 

Effectiveness of DOE's Catch-Up Plan Is Uncertain: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Status of the Department of Energy's Model Building Code 
Determinations: 

DOE Has Completed One of Three Commercial Building Code Determinations: 

DOE Has Completed Four of Five Residential Building Code 
Determinations: 

DOE Tracks States' Building Codes: 

Appendix II: Objectives, Scope, and Method: 

Appendix III: Rulemakings and Delays for Consumer Products and 
Industrial Equipment with Deadlines That Have Passed: 

Appendix IV: Participants in Energy Efficiency Standards Delphi Panel: 

Appendix V: Comments from the Department of Energy: 

Appendix VI: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Actions DOE Is Required to Take for Consumer Product and 
Industrial Equipment Categories with Rulemaking Deadlines: 

Table 2: Timeliness of DOE Rulemakings That Have Come Due: 

Table 3: Status of Efficiency Standards for Consumer Products and 
Industrial Equipment with Rulemaking Deadlines That Have Passed: 

Table 4: Status of Required Industrial Equipment Standards Revisions 
without Deadlines: 

Table 5: Status of DOE's Review of ASHRAE Standard 90.1 Revisions: 

Table 6: Status of DOE's Review of MEC and IECC Revisions: 

Abbreviations: 

ASHRAE: American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning 
Engineers: 

Btu: British thermal unit: 

CABO: Council of American Building Officials: 

DOE: Department of Energy: 

DOT: Department of Transportation: 

EPAct 2005: Energy Policy Act of 2005: 

EPCA: Energy Policy and Conservation Act: 

ICC: International Code Council: 

IECC: International Energy Conservation Code: 

LBNL: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory: 

MEC: Model Energy Code: 

PMF: Presidential Management Fellows: 

PNNL: Pacific Northwest National Laboratory: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

January 31, 2007: 

The Honorable John D. Dingell: 
Chairman: 
Committee on Energy and Commerce: 
House of Representatives: 

The Honorable Rick Boucher: 
Chairman: 
Subcommittee on Energy and Air Quality: 
Committee on Energy and Commerce: 
House of Representatives: 

The Honorable Edward J. Markey: 
House of Representatives: 

Recent energy cost increases and concerns about global warming are 
leading to a new national focus on reducing U.S. energy consumption. 
Household and commercial products that are regulated by the U.S. 
Department of Energy (DOE) will account for about 30 percent of 
estimated total U.S. energy consumed in 2006, according to DOE's 
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Increasing the energy efficiency 
of these kinds of products could produce significant energy savings. 
Not surprisingly, therefore, Congress has long been interested in 
improving energy efficiency. In 1975, under the Energy Policy and 
Conservation Act (EPCA), Congress required DOE to set target minimum 
energy efficiency standards for manufacturers of specified categories 
of consumer products such as refrigerators, dishwashers, furnaces, and 
hot water heaters. Congress has amended the statute to include 
additional consumer product categories such as fluorescent lamps and 
plumbing products, as well as industrial equipment categories such as 
steam boilers and electric motors. Minimum efficiency standards for 
consumer product and industrial equipment categories are designed to 
eliminate the least efficient products from the market.[Footnote 1] 

EPCA, as amended, also reflects manufacturers' and states' interest in 
having uniform federal standards for energy-efficient products, rather 
than a patchwork of state standards. It prohibits states and localities 
from setting more stringent standards than the federal standards for 
covered products unless the states obtain waivers from DOE. When the 
act was passed, several states were setting their own energy efficiency 
standards, and stakeholders, including states and manufacturers, 
generally believed that uniform federal standards would result in lower 
costs for manufacturing and, hence, lower prices for consumers, as well 
as saving energy overall. 

Under EPCA amendments, Congress mandated deadlines for DOE to issue 
rules that set minimum energy efficiency standards for most consumer 
product categories. Congress also made manufacturers' compliance with 
the standards mandatory. The statute also requires DOE to set and 
revise standards through the federal rulemaking process. This process 
calls for analyzing the technical and economic issues associated with 
setting energy efficiency standards for each category, proposing a 
standard through public notification, soliciting comments on the 
standard, revising the rule, and issuing the final rule. DOE program 
staff in Washington develop these rules, using analysis by experts-- 
such as staff at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) and other 
contractors--on the technical and economic aspects. The rules undergo 
legal and policy reviews within the department before they are issued. 

Most of the categories with deadlines require at least two rules-- 
either to set an initial standard and later update it or to update a 
congressionally set standard and then update it again about 5 years 
after the first deadline. For categories without deadlines, DOE must 
first review revisions that nongovernmental standard-setting entities 
make to their model standards and, generally, issue a rule announcing 
whether it will adopt these revised model standards or reject them and 
issue its own standards. 

In 1993, we reported that while DOE had issued rules for some of the 
product categories with passed deadlines, these had always been issued 
late, and the others had not been issued yet. We cited inadequate 
resources as a major reason for delays.[Footnote 2] Congressional 
action in 2005 reflected continuing concerns about DOE's ability to 
issue rules for energy-efficient consumer products and industrial 
equipment. The Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPAct 2005) required DOE to 
report to Congress by February 8, 2006, and again every 6 months 
following the submission of that report, on its plans to clear its 
backlog of standards that need to be set or considered for revision. In 
its first report, submitted in January 2006,[Footnote 3] DOE reported a 
backlog of required rulemakings for many consumer product and 
industrial equipment categories but made a commitment, from the 
Secretary on down, to take a number of steps to clear the backlog by 
2011.[Footnote 4] Twenty of these consumer product and industrial 
equipment categories have statutory deadlines that have passed and 
involve 34 different product rules.[Footnote 5] 

The requirement for reports to Congress every 6 months highlights the 
importance Congress places on setting energy efficiency standards for 
specific consumer products and industrial equipment. The missed 
deadlines have meant missed opportunities to reduce (1) consumers' 
energy costs, (2) the need for new power facilities, and (3) the level 
of polluting emissions such as carbon dioxide, among other things. 
While some consumers may choose to buy products that are more efficient 
without waiting for federal standards, others may not do so for a 
number of reasons--because the more efficient products may cost more at 
the time of purchase, for example. If, however, all models in a 
category have to meet certain minimum energy efficiency standards, then 
the potential for savings over the life of the product, due to lower 
energy bills, can be significant. For example, by 2030, for the minimum 
energy efficiency standards for consumer products that DOE has set thus 
far, DOE projects that consumers will save nearly $125 billion. Enough 
energy would be saved to operate all U.S. homes for over 2 years, based 
on 2006 estimated energy consumption. 

As requested, this report examines (1) the extent to which DOE has met 
its statutory obligations to issue rules on minimum energy efficiency 
standards for consumer products and industrial equipment and (2) 
whether DOE's plans are likely to clear the backlog of required 
rulemakings and whether these plans could be improved. In addition, you 
asked us to assess whether DOE has met statutory deadlines for building 
code determinations (see app. I). In future work, GAO plans to evaluate 
federal agencies' efforts to provide household consumers with 
information about energy savings opportunities for purchases of 
appliances, lighting, and other energy consuming products. 

We reviewed statutes and regulations regarding the requirements and 
deadlines for minimum energy efficiency standards for consumer products 
and industrial equipment. We interviewed relevant officials from, and 
analyzed documentation provided by, DOE, a DOE contractor, energy 
organizations, and nongovernmental standard-setting entities; an expert 
on regulatory efficiency; and government officials from Canada and 
California--governments that are known for their exemplary standards-
setting programs.[Footnote 6] In addition, we convened a Web- based 
panel of 33 energy efficiency standards stakeholders from federal and 
state governments, industry, nonprofit organizations, and utilities who 
are both widely recognized as knowledgeable about key aspects of energy 
efficiency standards and are involved with DOE's standards rulemaking 
process. We obtained panel members' views using a modified, Web-based 
version of the Delphi method, a systematic process for obtaining 
individuals' views and obtaining group members' consensus, if possible, 
on a problem of interest. A more detailed description of our 
objectives, scope, and method is presented in appendix II. We did not 
examine the merits of the standards DOE has set. Although DOE is 
required to issue rules regarding standards for plumbing products, we 
excluded them from this report because they primarily involve 
conserving water, rather than energy. In addition, we did not consider 
deadlines for the purposes of this report set in EPAct 2005; nor did we 
examine DOE's activities undertaken since EPAct 2005 that did not 
result in a completed standard. We conducted our review from June 2005 
through January 2007 in accordance with generally accepted government 
auditing standards. 

Results in Brief: 

DOE has missed all 34 of the deadlines for rulemaking that have come 
due for the 20 consumer products and industrial equipment categories 
with deadlines that have passed. In addition, it has not revised 
standards for one of the six industrial equipment categories that have 
no deadlines but for which DOE is obligated to issue new rules. Of the 
34 rules with missed deadlines, 11 were issued late, and the other 23 
have not been issued at all. Delays in meeting deadlines range from 
about 2 months to 15 years. Overall, all required rulemakings have been 
set for only three product categories with deadlines: (1) 
refrigerators, refrigerator-freezers, and freezers; (2) small furnaces; 
and (3) clothes washers. DOE has yet to set all required rulemakings 
for 17 additional categories such as--for consumer products--kitchen 
ranges and ovens, dishwashers, clothes dryers, hot water heaters, and--
for industrial equipment--various electric motors and electric 
distribution transformers, which reduce the voltage of an electric 
utility's power distribution line to the lower voltages suitable for 
most equipment, lighting, and appliances. In addition, standards are up 
to date for five of the six industrial equipment categories that have 
no deadlines but which must have standards set: (1) warm air furnaces, 
(2) packaged boilers, (3) storage water heaters, (4) instantaneous 
water heaters, and (5) unfired water storage tanks (that store water 
and have an external source for heating it). The sixth category--a 
particular type of large air conditioner and heat pump--has not had 
standards set. Our panel members cited increased energy consumption as 
one of the most significant effects of the delays. In fact, according 
to LBNL, the delays for the four consumer product categories with the 
greatest energy savings potential will cost the nation an estimated $28 
billion in forgone savings by 2030. Our panel also pointed to other 
potential effects of delays, such as states attempting to set their own 
efficiency standards and manufacturers' and utilities' difficulties in 
making business plans. Standards that differ from state to state would 
be likely to cause higher manufacturer costs than a single federal 
standard and, hence, higher costs for consumers. 

It is unclear whether DOE's latest plan for clearing its backlog of 
rulemakings will effectively bring its minimum energy efficiency 
standards up to date, primarily because DOE cannot be certain it knows 
the root causes of the delays, and its catch-up plan lacks critical 
elements of an effective project management plan. Specifically: 

* Root causes are uncertain. Neither DOE nor our panel could agree on, 
and we could not definitively determine, the root causes of the delays. 
DOE has not developed the program management data it needs to identify 
bottlenecks in the rulemaking process and develop solutions. As a 
result, we could not determine if the corrective actions DOE has 
proposed will alleviate delays. In developing the catch-up plan, the 
managers relied primarily on anecdotal information from program staff 
to determine the causes of delays. In the absence of management 
information, such as the length of each stage of DOE's rulemaking 
process, we were not able to determine which of these causes or 
combinations of causes account for the delays. Some of our panelists 
raised concerns that DOE may not be addressing what they believe are 
the most relevant reasons for delays; for example, DOE may not have 
allocated sufficient funding or assigned adequate technical staff. 
Unless the causes of the delays are known, it is difficult to know 
whether problems have been addressed. But, most of the panelists rated 
the components of DOE's plan highly and expect that it will help DOE 
meet the deadlines of its catch-up schedule if these actions are 
implemented. 

* The plan lacks critical project management elements. According to 
leading project management practices, effective project plans have two 
key components that are lacking in DOE's plan. First, plans should hold 
officials and staff accountable for meeting interim and final 
deadlines. If the officials do not meet these deadlines, they should 
provide legitimate reasons for the delays. Second, the plan should 
include provisions for adequate resources. Instead, DOE's plan 
increases the workload sixfold over that in recent years without 
increasing proportionately the resources it will devote to the program. 
DOE officials told us they plan to rely on increased productivity, with 
only a marginal increase in resources, to bring the standards up to 
date. Furthermore, DOE's plan does not include a means of ensuring that 
staff and reviewers are accountable for meeting deadlines. 

To help ensure that DOE reduces or eliminates the backlog, we are 
making recommendations to the Secretary of Energy that DOE revise its 
catch-up plan to incorporate leading management practices. In 
commenting on a draft of this report, DOE did not provide views on our 
recommendations. DOE said it was incorrect to single out any official 
or office for the delays and that the report did not reflect many of 
its standards-setting activities undertaken since EPAct 2005. We 
disagree with DOE's characterization of our analysis. We reported 
several causes of delays in the standards-setting process; also, the 
activities DOE has taken since EPAct 2005 that did not result in 
completed standards are outside of the scope of this report. 

Background: 

Under EPCA, as amended, covered product and equipment categories may 
need one or two rulemakings for the following reasons: 

* Most often, if Congress established a standard in the law, DOE must 
publish a rule revising the standard or explaining why a revision is 
not justified. Generally, such statutes require two rulemakings: an 
initial revision and then a second revision, usually 5 years later. 
This type of rulemaking is associated with most categories. 

* For several consumer products for which Congress did not set a 
standard in law, DOE must issue two rules--one rule to create a 
standard and a later rule to update the standard. 

* For several industrial equipment categories for which Congress 
established a standard in law, DOE must review amendments to model 
standards set by a specified nongovernmental standard-setting entity. 
Based on DOE's review, it must either publish a rule updating the 
statutory standards to reflect the amended model standards, or publish 
a rule demonstrating that a more stringent standard is justified. The 
statute specifically requires DOE to consider the standards set by the 
American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning 
Engineers (ASHRAE). 

* For three other industrial equipment categories, DOE must first 
publish a determination of whether a standard is needed. If DOE 
determines the need for a standard, it must then publish a rule setting 
such a standard 18 months after publishing the determination. However, 
DOE does not have a deadline for making a determination. 

Overall, DOE is required to determine that revisions to standards 
achieve the maximum improvement in energy efficiency that is 
"technologically feasible and economically justified." In determining 
whether a standard is economically justified, DOE must consider the 
economic impacts of the revision on manufacturers and consumers, the 
savings in operating costs throughout the life of the product, the 
total projected amount of energy savings likely to result from the 
standard, and whether the standard would result in a product that is 
less useful or does not perform as well. Table 1 shows the number of 
deadlines and types of actions required for consumer product and 
industrial equipment categories with deadlines that have passed. In 
addition, DOE is obligated to issue rules adopting revised standards 
for another six industrial equipment categories: packaged terminal air 
conditioners and packaged terminal heat pumps; warm air furnaces; 
packaged boilers; storage water heaters; instantaneous water heaters; 
unfired water storage tanks. DOE has no mandated deadlines for issuing 
these rules. 

Table 1: Actions DOE Is Required to Take for Consumer Product and 
Industrial Equipment Categories with Rulemaking Deadlines: 

Consumer products.  

Action required for consumer product or industrial equipment 
categories: Issue a rule revising a standard or explaining why a 
revision is not justified: 1; Clothes washers; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2. 

Action required for consumer product or industrial equipment 
categories: Issue a rule revising a standard or explaining why a 
revision is not justified: 2: Refrigerators, refrigerator-freezers, and 
freezers; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2. 

Action required for consumer product or industrial equipment 
categories: Issue a rule revising a standard or explaining why a 
revision is not justified: 3: Small furnaces; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 1. 

Action required for consumer product or industrial equipment 
categories: Issue a rule revising a standard or explaining why a 
revision is not justified: 4: Central air conditioners and heat pumps; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2. 

Action required for consumer product or industrial equipment 
categories: Issue a rule revising a standard or explaining why a 
revision is not justified: 5: Clothes dryers; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2. 

Action required for consumer product or industrial equipment 
categories: Issue a rule revising a standard or explaining why a 
revision is not justified: 6: Dishwashers; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2. 

Action required for consumer product or industrial equipment 
categories: Issue a rule revising a standard or explaining why a 
revision is not justified: 7: Fluorescent lamp ballasts; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2. 

Action required for consumer product or industrial equipment 
categories: Issue a rule revising a standard or explaining why a 
revision is not justified: 8: Room air conditioners; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2. 

Action required for consumer product or industrial equipment 
categories: Issue a rule revising a standard or explaining why a 
revision is not justified: 9: Water heaters; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2. 

Action required for consumer product or industrial equipment 
categories: Issue a rule revising a standard or explaining why a 
revision is not justified: 10: Direct heating equipment; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2. 

Action required for consumer product or industrial equipment 
categories: Issue a rule revising a standard or explaining why a 
revision is not justified: 11: Furnaces; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 1. 

Action required for consumer product or industrial equipment 
categories: Issue a rule revising a standard or explaining why a 
revision is not justified: 12: General service fluorescent lamps and 
incandescent reflector lamps; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2. 

Action required for consumer product or industrial equipment 
categories: Issue a rule revising a standard or explaining why a 
revision is not justified: 13: Additional general service fluorescent 
and general service incandescent lamps; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 1. 

Action required for consumer product or industrial equipment 
categories: Issue a rule revising a standard or explaining why a 
revision is not justified: 14: Kitchen ranges and ovens; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2. 

Action required for consumer product or industrial equipment 
categories: Issue a rule revising a standard or explaining why a 
revision is not justified: 15: Mobile home furnaces; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 1. 

Action required for consumer product or industrial equipment 
categories: Issue a rule revising a standard or explaining why a 
revision is not justified: 16: Pool heaters; Number of rulemaking 
deadlines that have come due: 2. 

Subtotal--number of consumer product rules required; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 28. 

Industrial equipment.  

Action required for consumer product or industrial equipment 
categories: Issue a rule revising a standard or explaining why a 
revision is not justified: 17: Electric motors not requiring national 
certification; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2. 

Action required for consumer product or industrial equipment 
categories: Issue a rule revising a standard or explaining why a 
revision is not justified: 18: Electric motors requiring national 
certification; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2. 

Action required for consumer product or industrial equipment 
categories: Issue a determination of whether a revision is justified, 
and, if so, issue a rule setting the standard: 19: Distribution 
transformers; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 1. 

Action required for consumer product or industrial equipment 
categories: Issue a determination of whether a revision is justified, 
and, if so, issue a rule setting the standard: 20: Small electric 
motors; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 1. 

Subtotal--number of industrial equipment rules required; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: : 6. 

Total--number of rules required for consumer products and industrial 
equipment; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 34. 

Source: GAO analysis of DOE data. 

Note: The numbers in the column on the left represent the number of 
product categories. 

[End of table] 

DOE Has Missed All Rulemaking Deadlines at a Cost of Billions in 
Forgone Energy Savings: 

DOE has missed all 34 of the rulemaking deadlines that have come due 
for the 20 product categories with deadlines, completing 11 of these 
rules late and not yet completing the remaining 23. DOE has also not 
revised standards for one of the six industrial equipment categories 
that require updates but have no deadlines. LBNL estimates that delays 
in setting minimum energy efficiency standards for four categories of 
consumer products that DOE believes use the most energy will cost the 
nation at least $28 billion in forgone energy savings by 2030. Our 
panel members identified two additional significant effects of the 
delays: states attempting to set their own standards and businesses and 
utilities having difficulty in making business decisions and planning 
for the future. 

DOE Has Not Met Any of Its Rulemaking Obligations on Time: 

As table 2 shows, none of the 34 rules with passed deadlines was 
completed on time. For rules that have been completed, delays ranged 
from less than 1 year to about 10 years; and incomplete rules are as 
much as 15 years late. 

Table 2: Timeliness of DOE Rulemakings That Have Come Due: 

Status: On time; 
Completed rulemakings: 0; 
Incomplete rulemakings: 0. 

Status: Less than 1 year late; 
Completed rulemakings: 2; 
Incomplete rulemakings: 1. 

Status: 1 year to less than 5 years late; 
Completed rulemakings: 4; 
Incomplete rulemakings: 2. 

Status: 5 years to less than 10 years late; 
Completed rulemakings: 5; 
Incomplete rulemakings: 8. 

Status: 10 years to 15 years late; 
Completed rulemakings: 0; 
Incomplete rulemakings: 12. 

Total; 
Completed rulemakings: 11; 
Incomplete rulemakings: 23. 

Source: GAO analysis of DOE data. 

[End of table] 

Table 3 shows the status of rules completed for consumer product and 
industrial equipment categories with deadlines that have passed. As the 
table shows, only three product or equipment categories--clothes 
washers; refrigerators, refrigerator-freezers, and freezers; and small 
furnaces--have had all their rules completed. As the table also shows, 
some categories have had one of two required rules completed, and 
others have had no rules completed. 

Table 3: Status of Efficiency Standards for Consumer Products and 
Industrial Equipment with Rulemaking Deadlines That Have Passed: 

Consumer products. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: 1: Clothes washers; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2; 
Status and number of completed rules (in parentheses): All rules 
completed (2). 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: 2: Refrigerators, 
refrigerator-freezers, and freezers; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2; 
Status and number of completed rules (in parentheses): All rules 
completed (2). 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: 3: Small 
furnaces[A]; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 1; 
Status and number of completed rules (in parentheses): All rules 
completed (1). 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: 4: Central air 
conditioners and heat pumps; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2; 
Status and number of completed rules (in parentheses): First rule 
completed (1). 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: 5: Clothes dryers; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2; 
Status and number of completed rules (in parentheses): First rule 
completed (1). 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: 6: Dishwashers; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2; 
Status and number of completed rules (in parentheses): First rule 
completed (1). 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: 7: Fluorescent lamp 
ballasts; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2; 
Status and number of completed rules (in parentheses): First rule 
completed (1). 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: 8: Room air 
conditioners; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2; 
Status and number of completed rules (in parentheses): First rule 
completed (1). 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: 9: Water heaters; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2; 
Status and number of completed rules (in parentheses): First rule 
completed (1). 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: 10: Direct heating 
equipment; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2; 
Status and number of completed rules (in parentheses): No rules 
completed. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: 11: Furnaces; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 1; 
Status and number of completed rules (in parentheses): No rules 
completed. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: 12: General service 
fluorescent lamps and incandescent reflector lamps; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2; 
Status and number of completed rules (in parentheses): No rules 
completed. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: 13: Additional 
general service fluorescent and general service incandescent lamps[A]; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 1; 
Status and number of completed rules (in parentheses): No rules 
completed. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: 14: Kitchen ranges 
and ovens; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2; 
Status and number of completed rules (in parentheses): No rules 
completed. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: 15: Mobile home 
furnaces[A]; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 1; 
Status and number of completed rules (in parentheses): No rules 
completed. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: 16: Pool heaters; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2; 
Status and number of completed rules (in parentheses): No rules 
completed. 

Industrial equipment. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: 17: Electric motors- 
not requiring national certification; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2; 
Status and number of completed rules (in parentheses): No rules 
completed. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: 18: Electric motors- 
requiring national certification; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 2; 
Status and number of completed rules (in parentheses): No rules 
completed. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: 19: Distribution 
transformers[A]; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 1; 
Status and number of completed rules (in parentheses): No rules 
completed. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: 20: Small electric 
motors[A]; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 1; 
Status and number of completed rules (in parentheses): No rules 
completed. 

Total; 
Number of rulemaking deadlines that have come due: 34; 
Status and number of completed rules (in parentheses): (11). 

Source: GAO analysis of DOE data. 

Note: The numbers in the column on the left represent the number of 
product categories. 

[A] Only one rulemaking required. 

[End of table] 

Appendix III provides additional information on the deadlines for these 
product and equipment categories. 

Furthermore, for the six industrial equipment categories that do not 
have deadlines, DOE has completed rules for five and has begun, but not 
completed, the rulemaking process for the remaining category, as table 
4 shows. 

Table 4: Status of Required Industrial Equipment Standards Revisions 
without Deadlines: 

Industrial equipment category: Packaged terminal air conditioners and 
heat pumps; 
Date of ASHRAE revision: 1999; 
DOE action: Rule not completed. 

Industrial equipment category: Warm air furnaces; 
Date of ASHRAE revision: 1999; 
DOE action: Rule completed. 

Industrial equipment category: Packaged boilers; 
Date of ASHRAE revision: 1999; 
DOE action: Rule completed. 

Industrial equipment category: Storage water heaters; 
Date of ASHRAE revision: 1999; 
DOE action: Rule completed. 

Industrial equipment category: Instantaneous water heaters; 
Date of ASHRAE revision: 1999; 
DOE action: Rule completed. 

Industrial equipment category: Unfired water storage tanks; 
Date of ASHRAE revision: 1999; 
DOE action: Rule completed. 

Source: GAO analysis of DOE data. 

[End of table] 

Delays Resulted in Forgone Energy Savings of at Least $28 Billion and 
Create Problems in Other Areas: 

DOE does not have estimates of the energy savings lost because of 
delays in completing rules. However, LBNL staff provided us with 
estimates of delays for the four categories of consumer products that 
DOE believes use the most energy--refrigerators and freezers, central 
air conditioners and heat pumps, water heaters, and clothes washers. 
According to these estimates, the nation would have saved at least $28 
billion in energy costs, even after paying higher equipment costs, by 
2030 if these standards had been put in place when required--that is, 
2.1 quadrillion British thermal units (Btu) of natural gas and 1.4 
quadrillion Btus of electricity. Historically, LBNL, under contract to 
DOE, has performed most of the technical and economic analyses for 
proposed standards rulemakings. To estimate the cost of delays, LBNL 
staff used the estimates of savings they developed to support proposed 
standards for the four consumer products. According to our analysis, 
LBNL took steps to ensure the estimates were reasonably accurate by 
considering such factors as whether the technologies used for the 
analysis would have been available at the time of the deadlines for 
setting standards. The total forgone energy savings is equal to the 
annual primary energy consumption of approximately 20 million U.S. 
households. In addition, the delays will also result in 53 million tons 
of carbon dioxide emissions, an amount equivalent to about 1 percent of 
total estimated U.S. carbon dioxide emissions in 2004. Our panelists 
noted that they consider increased energy consumption to be one of the 
two most significant effects of DOE's delays in revising efficiency 
standards. 

Similarly, delays for one type of industrial equipment, electric 
distribution transformers, have resulted in significant forgone energy 
savings. Distribution transformers reduce the voltage of an electric 
utility's power distribution line to the lower voltages suitable for 
most equipment, lighting, and appliances. Nine years ago, DOE 
determined that standards for distribution transformers were warranted 
as technologically feasible and economically justified and were likely 
to result in significant savings. However, DOE did not publish proposed 
standards for distribution transformers in the Federal Register until 
August 2006.[Footnote 7] According to DOE, the energy savings from the 
proposed distribution transformer standards would eliminate the need 
for approximately 11 new 400-megawatt power plants by 2038, enough to 
provide a sufficient flow of electricity to about 3 million 
homes.[Footnote 8] 

These estimates account for only a portion of the forgone savings from 
the lack of timely rules for consumer products and industrial 
equipment; however, no estimates of the forgone savings are available 
for the remaining product and equipment categories. Equally important, 
because many energy-using products and equipment have long service 
lives, delays in setting standards lead to years of using the products 
and equipment that are less energy efficient than they could be, 
compounding the loss of the energy efficiency. For example, electric 
distribution transformers have a typical service life of about 30 
years. With about 50 million transformers in the United States, each 
year of delay until a rule setting standard is completed means that 
more of these transformers will be replaced at the present energy 
efficiencies, rather than the proposed level, leading to many 
additional years of forgone savings. 

Other, nonquantifiable effects have also resulted, or can result, from 
delays in issuing energy efficiency rules. Our panel members noted the 
possibility that states would attempt to set their own appliance 
efficiency standards as the other most significant effect of delays. 
Indeed, states are dissatisfied with DOE's delays. In 2005, 15 states 
and New York City sued DOE for "foot-dragging [that] results in greater 
---and avoidable--energy use." The states cited, among other effects, 
high energy costs, increased environmental harm, and burdens on the 
electricity grid from DOE's delays as justification for their actions. 
The suit was settled recently, with DOE agreeing to eliminate its 
backlog by 2011, the same date set in its report to Congress. According 
to officials from the California Energy Commission, California has 
begun to press Congress to lift the preemption that prevents the states 
from readily setting their own standards. While states had expressed 
dissatisfaction with the pace of rulemaking and before 1987 had 
petitioned DOE for waivers, the 1987 amendment to EPCA made it 
considerably more difficult to obtain a waiver, according to DOE 
officials. Since then, DOE has received only one petition for a waiver. 
Panel members commented that if states obtain waivers and pass 
individual standards, the result could be a patchwork of state 
standards, preventing economies of scale in manufacturing and raising 
costs for both consumers and manufacturers. 

Panel members also pointed out that delays make business planning 
difficult for manufacturers and utilities, which could also increase 
their costs and, therefore, costs to consumers. As one panel member 
noted, "Product manufacturers don't know when new standards will take 
effect in advance, making it difficult to plan product redesigns and 
thereby increasing cost of compliance." According to another panelist, 
"An uncertain future regulatory environment makes it very difficult for 
appliance and equipment manufacturers to make investment decisions." 
For example, a manufacturer may be reluctant to invest large sums in a 
new technology if the new technology may be made obsolete by new 
federal efficiency standards or if new standards might not allow the 
manufacturer to gain a hoped-for competitive advantage via new 
technology. To minimize such uncertainty and its attendant risks, 
manufacturers want DOE to make regulatory decisions on time." 

Effectiveness of DOE's Catch-Up Plan Is Uncertain: 

DOE has developed a catch-up plan to resolve the backlog of delayed 
energy efficiency standards. However, since DOE has not completely 
identified the root causes for the delays and because the plan lacks 
critical elements of an effective management approach, the likelihood 
of success is not clear. 

DOE's Plan Lays Out an Approach to Clearing the Backlog, but It Is 
Unclear Whether the Plan Is Addressing Root Causes of Delays: 

According to DOE's January 2006 report to Congress, the department has 
identified four causes of delays in its efficiency standards 
rulemaking: (1) an overly ambitious schedule set in statute; (2) the 
sequential nature of the rulemaking process; (3) the consequences of 
the Process Rule, which the report states that DOE adopted in 1996 to 
address concerns about its analyses and stakeholder involvement; and 
(4) DOE's internal document review and clearance process. Specifically: 

* An ambitious statutory schedule. According to the report, Congress's 
rulemaking schedule was "rigorous." As a result, the program staff were 
unable to meet the deadlines from the beginning. These delays were 
exacerbated when Congress increased the number of products that 
required rulemakings. In 1994, DOE attempted to address the backlog by 
proposing standards for eight products in one rulemaking. However, 
according to DOE, this rulemaking effort met with strong opposition 
from industry, drawing over 5,000 responses during the comment period, 
and DOE withdrew the proposal. Following this experience, Congress 
imposed a 1-year moratorium on new or amended standards. The moratorium 
further exacerbated the backlog, according to DOE. 

* Sequential nature of the rulemaking process. The elements of a 
rulemaking must occur sequentially, and, according to DOE, "this 
sequence-dependent nature of the analyses makes it vulnerable to un- 
recoverable delays." The standards rulemaking process includes many 
overlapping requirements from EPCA, as amended; Executive Orders; and 
the Process Rule, which create a complex analytical and procedural 
challenge, according to the report. The standards rulemaking process 
typically consists of three stages--an advance notice of proposed 
rulemaking, a notice of proposed rulemaking, and a final rule--and each 
of these stages includes internal and external review and comment 
periods, as well as technical analyses that build on previous analyses. 
Most of these tasks cannot be done concurrently, so when delays occur, 
often the time lost cannot be made up because of these rigid 
requirements. 

* Consequences of the Process Rule. Under DOE's 1996 "Process 
Rule,"[Footnote 9] the potential energy savings, rather than statutory 
deadlines, determine which standards should be set first. Consequently, 
DOE reported to Congress, it analyzed the likely impacts of all pending 
energy efficiency rulemakings and used this analysis to categorize each 
rulemaking as high-, medium-, or low-priority, depending on energy- 
savings potential. Regardless of deadlines, high-priority rules 
received the bulk of the resources, medium-priority rules received some 
resources, and low-priority rules were not addressed at all. The 
Process Rule also called for increased stakeholder input and expert 
review, which added time to the rulemaking, according to DOE's report. 
Finally, according to DOE's 2006 report, the Process Rule increased the 
complexity of the technical analysis required, adding more time. 

* Internal document review and clearance process. The quality of draft 
rulemaking documents was inconsistent, according to DOE's 2006 report, 
which made the internal review process time consuming. In addition, 
reviews by the Office of General Counsel, Office of Policy and 
International Affairs, and other internal reviewers were not always 
managed effectively, according to the report. Consequently, issues were 
not identified and resolved early in the process, and draft rules often 
did not receive the timely reviews needed to approve them for issuance. 

While DOE identified these causes for rulemaking delays in its January 
2006 report, DOE staff we spoke with did not agree on the causes. 
Program staff told us General Counsel's legal reviews were excessively 
long, while General Counsel officials attributed their lengthy review 
to the poor quality of documents, which required extensive non-legal 
editing. DOE lacks program management data that would enable it to 
identify with specificity where in the agency's internal review process 
delays are occurring. In addition, LBNL staff disagreed with the 
report's contention that the Process Rule required more time for 
technical analysis. Rather, they said, the Process Rule's requirement 
for more complex analysis and for more systematic stakeholder 
involvement addressed those parts of the rulemaking process earlier 
than before but took about the same amount of time. 

Our panel members, based on their past involvement or familiarity with 
standards rulemaking, agreed that the internal review process was 
problematic. Specifically, the most frequently cited cause for delays 
in developing energy efficiency standards were delays in the General 
Counsel review process. One panel member stated that the General 
Counsel review process was "one of the lengthiest and most opaque 
elements of the standards process." In addition, about half of our 
panelists said the low priority historically given to the program, not 
only by DOE but by the Administration and Congress as well, was a great 
cause of delay in issuing the standards. Finally, panel members 
identified two additional major causes of delay that DOE did not, 
namely inadequate budget and insufficient technical staff. 

While some of these identified causes are beyond DOE's control, such as 
the statutory deadlines, DOE reported that it could take actions to 
clear the backlog by 2011. DOE plans to do the following to ensure that 
rulemakings are more timely: 

* Make the rulemaking process more efficient. DOE plans to stagger the 
start of rulemakings in order to make the best use of staff time and 
resources. In the past, DOE staff worked on one rule at a time. Under 
DOE's plan, staff will work on several rules simultaneously, which 
should enable the staff to make better use of their time when drafts 
are out for review. In addition, DOE plans to combine several products 
with related technical and policy characteristics--such as water 
heaters, pool heaters, and direct heating equipment--into a single 
rulemaking, which should expedite the rulemaking process. 

* Adhere to the deadline for closing public comments. DOE reported that 
it will only consider comments received before their deadlines in its 
current analysis. In the past, DOE continued to consider comments after 
the closing date stated in the Federal Register and responded to those 
comments with additional analysis, which delayed the issuance of the 
final rulemaking. 

* Simplify the analysis for each rulemaking. Senior management 
officials are expected to approve the staff's analytical approach and 
scope of effort earlier in the rulemaking process. In the past, 
rulemaking staff conducted their analysis for a product category 
without ensuring that senior management approved of their approach. As 
a result, according to the plan, management often called for a 
different approach when reviewing a draft analysis, which required 
significantly more time. In addition, DOE plans to conduct less 
exhaustive analysis for some rules, rather than conducting the same 
level of analysis for all rules. If all the stakeholders agree that a 
product category does not require DOE's usual complex analysis, which 
would be the case when the key issues are clearly understood, DOE will 
perform less extensive analysis. DOE expects this change to shorten 
rulemaking times. 

* Better ensure the quality of the proposed rulemaking and 
accountability of all staff and reviewers. DOE plans to take four 
actions toward this goal: (1) train staff in how to meet all regulatory 
procedural requirements and provide readily available comprehensive 
guidance in order to avoid procedural mistakes that lead to delays, (2) 
contract with a national laboratory to maintain a data management 
system for tracking rulemaking progress and use the resulting data to 
identify problems for quicker resolution, (3) match skill levels with 
tasks so that resources are used most efficiently, and (4) encourage 
stakeholders to negotiate a proposed standard in return for an 
expedited rulemaking process. 

* Improve the document review and clearance process. DOE plans to 
emphasize better document quality so that reviewers can focus their 
efforts on legal and policy issues rather than on basic editorial 
issues. In the past, formats, styles, and approaches of documents were 
not consistent, which slowed down the review process. DOE has issued a 
style guide and a template for documents to better ensure consistency. 
In addition, DOE plans to have different reviewers examine the proposed 
rulemaking concurrently, rather than sequentially, throughout the 
rulemaking process. 

* Adhere to a 36-month timetable for completing a rule. DOE will 
allocate approximately 16 months for analysis, 6 months for public 
review and comment, 8 months for its internal review, and 6 months for 
review by the Office of Management and Budget. In the past, while DOE 
had a 3-year limit for rulemaking, it virtually never issued rules 
within that period. 

Most panelists rated the components of DOE's catch-up plan highly and 
expect that, if followed, it will likely help DOE meet its schedule for 
completing rules. The panelists particularly favored the parts of DOE's 
catch-up plan to reform its internal review process, use an expedited 
process when stakeholders recommend standards on which they have 
reached consensus, and stagger rulemakings. They also emphasized the 
importance of having the Secretary of Energy and the administration 
provide more management attention and priority to the program. Finally, 
most agreed that certain aspects of DOE's current rulemaking process 
should not be changed. Specifically, DOE should continue to perform 
complete technical and economic analyses and explain its justification 
for the standards it selects, include the public and stakeholders 
throughout the rulemaking process, and ensure that the process and 
analyses are transparent. 

Despite these favorable views, some panelists expressed concern that 
DOE might not have addressed what they consider the most relevant 
causes of delay. For example, according to one panelist's observations, 
"the delays are an internal management problem at DOE, and the 
department's internal procedures are a black box. It is hard to know 
with any assurance what the real problem is and whether the issue is 
budget or staffing or bureaucratic procedures." According to another 
panelist's review of DOE's plan, the plan "focused too much on reducing 
analytical complexity and controlling stakeholder participation-- 
neither of which were major contributors to delays--and too little on 
internal process improvements, without which delays will continue." 

Although many of DOE's actions appear reasonable, we agree that DOE may 
not have identified the root causes of its rulemaking delays. 
Consequently, DOE risks expending resources on the wrong factors or 
emphasizing minor or irrelevant causes. DOE has not developed the 
program management data it needs to identify bottlenecks in the 
rulemaking process. Even though DOE has work logs that compile limited 
data on some parts of the rulemaking process, such as the amount of 
time taken for internal reviews, the data are not detailed enough to 
identify the source of delays. Furthermore, DOE does not have data on 
the length of all stages of its rulemaking process. Because DOE 
managers lacked data to determine causes, they said they compiled 
information about possible causes during discussions with staff. 
Despite the problems with their data, managers told us that they 
believe that they have identified the root causes of delay. 

DOE's Plan Lacks Critical Elements of Effective Project Management: 

According to our work on leading performance management practices and 
the work of a government regulatory process expert, management plans 
should contain specific strategies to resolve problems and help 
congressional decision makers understand how the agency plans to 
improve its performance.[Footnote 10] Such plans also provide a basis 
for accountability. While DOE's plan includes elements intended to make 
the rulemaking process more efficient, it lacks two critical elements 
to help ensure success of the plan--assurance of accountability and 
management's allocation of adequate resources. Specifically: 

* Assurance of accountability. While DOE has laid out a schedule for 
clearing its rulemaking backlog for standards, its past poor 
performance calls into question whether it is likely to be accountable 
to the schedule in the catch-up plan. According to an Assistant General 
Counsel who manages and tracks the regulatory process for the 
Department of Transportation (DOT), an agency with very extensive and 
effective electronic regulatory management, a successful rulemaking 
process holds its management and staff accountable to interim and final 
deadlines. For example, DOT publishes its deadlines on its Web site, 
making the agency's actions to meet the deadlines transparent to all 
stakeholders. While DOT's deadlines are target dates only, this 
transparency puts pressure on each participant to carry out his or her 
responsibilities on time or to provide legitimate reasons for any 
delays. DOE publishes a schedule of deadlines for some standard-setting 
rulemaking, including the interim deadlines, in its Semiannual 
Regulatory Agenda.[Footnote 11] However, when DOE misses these 
deadlines, it generally does not explain why, or how it plans to make 
up the lost time when it publishes revised deadlines. The catch-up plan 
does not ensure that the pattern of missing deadlines will be broken. 

* Adequate resources. As far back as 1993 we reported that insufficient 
resources were a primary cause of DOE's delays in updating energy 
efficiency standards. This may still be the case. While the DOE plan 
calls for a sixfold increase in workload, it does not increase program 
staffing and contractor budgets in the same proportion. Program 
managers told us they generally have had 7 to 14 staff working on 
energy efficiency rules, with 7 on the job as of fiscal year 2006. They 
plan to add 2 full-time staff and 1 from the Presidential Management 
Fellows (PMF) program, a nonpermanent position, for an increase to 10 
staff in fiscal year 2007.[Footnote 12] Similarly, from fiscal years 
2000 through 2006, DOE's budget for contractor staff has averaged about 
$10 million per year. For fiscal year 2007, DOE requested $12 million 
for contractors, a 20 percent resource increase. DOE expects these 
limited resource increases to cover a 600 percent increase in workload. 
In the absence of further increasing resources, DOE said in its January 
2006 report it plans to meet the increased workload by improving 
productivity. 

Conclusions: 

DOE's program for energy efficiency standards has been plagued by 
delays for decades. Although many steps in DOE's most recent January 
2006 plan to address these delays appear to be reasonable, DOE does not 
definitively know whether the plan will address root causes and clear 
the backlog. Furthermore, DOE's plan lacks important elements of 
effective management practices that would help assure success. 
Consequently, it is unclear whether DOE can carry out the ambitious 
schedule it has set for itself to update energy efficiency standards. 
If DOE does not succeed in clearing its backlog, the nation and 
consumers will continue to forgo the benefits of more energy-efficient 
consumer products and industrial equipment. The loss of such benefits 
will make the nation depend even more on imported energy. The 
continuing commitment of DOE's top management to make standards 
rulemaking a top organizational priority is essential to DOE's success 
in completing all energy efficiency rules. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

To increase the likelihood that DOE's plan for updating minimum energy 
efficiency standards is successfully implemented, we recommend that the 
Secretary of Energy take the following actions: 

* Employ the elements of leading management practices, including: 

- expediting the efforts DOE has begun to establish a tracking system 
to gather data that may be used to identify and address causes of 
delays to more effectively manage the rulemaking process; 

- ensuring that the interim goals and time frames are transparent to 
all stakeholders, and that all internal stakeholders, including 
reviewers and program staff, are held accountable to the time frames; 
and: 

- allocating adequate resources within DOE's appropriation. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

We provided the Department of Energy with a draft of this report for 
review and comment. Although DOE did not provide views on our 
recommendations, it expressed concerns in two areas. First, regarding 
our discussion of the causes of delays in setting standards, DOE stated 
that it is incorrect to assign blame for delays to any one office, 
official, decision, or process--and specifically to the Office of the 
General Counsel. DOE stated that doing so reflects a simplistic and 
largely incorrect understanding of the program's complexity. DOE noted 
that the delays in setting standards have spanned administrations of 
both parties, several Secretaries of Energy, and various DOE offices 
and personnel; also, although DOE work logs may indicate that a 
specific office has a document for a certain period of time, during 
that time multiple individuals from different offices may have been 
working together on the document. We disagree with DOE's 
characterization of our analysis. In establishing the context for our 
findings, we pointed out that the energy efficiency standards-setting 
process was complex and that there were multiple reasons for delays. To 
provide more definitive information on the root causes of the extensive 
delays that have been experienced, we sought data from DOE and the 
opinions of cognizant DOE staff. However, because DOE management could 
not provide data to conclusively document the reasons for the 
substantial delays, or the data provided by DOE as contained in 
internal work logs were inadequate to determine causality, and because 
representatives of the various DOE offices could not agree on the root 
causes, we turned to a well-recognized process for identifying causes 
in complex situations--a Delphi panel. Panel members were carefully, 
objectively selected individuals who have been closely involved in 
DOE's rulemaking process for setting standards over an extensive period 
of time. They most frequently cited delays in the General Counsel 
review process as cause for delays in developing energy efficiency 
standards. We believe that our use of this method provided a clearer 
understanding of the causes of delays than DOE has been able to 
provide. As we noted earlier, in DOE's January 2006 report to Congress 
and in our interviews with representatives of the offices involved in 
the standard-setting process, those associated with the program 
generally acknowledged that they could have done more but pointed to 
others as the cause of the delays and therefore have not fully accepted 
responsibility for the program's failures. Second, DOE stated that our 
report did not capture many of the recent standards-setting activities 
undertaken since enactment of EPAct 2005. We agree that there has been 
a flurry of standards-related activity, as expressed by DOE in its 
letter commenting on our report, and we have noted this in our report. 
Although we recognize that DOE has taken a number of steps that should 
move the program forward, it has not yet published any additional final 
standards for the product and equipment categories included in the 
scope of our work and our report's findings have not changed. DOE's 
letter commenting on our report is presented in appendix V. 

As agreed with your offices, unless you publicly announce the contents 
of this report earlier, we plan no further distribution until 30 days 
from the report date. At that time, we will send copies of this report 
to the Secretary of Energy and other interested parties. We will also 
make copies available to others upon request. In addition, the report 
will be available at no charge on the GAO Web site at 
http://www.gao.gov. 

If you or members of your staff have questions about this report, 
please contact me at (202) 512-3841 or wellsj@gao.gov. Contact points 
for our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be 
found on the last page of this report. Key contributors to this report 
are listed in appendix VI. 

Signed by: 

Jim Wells: 
Director, Natural Resources and Environment: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Status of the Department of Energy's Model Building Code 
Determinations: 

States and their subdivisions, such as counties and cities, adopt 
building codes that establish minimum requirements for energy-efficient 
design and construction of commercial and residential buildings. The 
building codes regulate components that affect the amount of energy 
that a building will use, such as the building envelope, electrical 
power, and lighting. These codes vary from one state to another and 
sometimes within a state. They may be mandatory or voluntary codes, 
either requiring builder compliance or serving as guidelines. States 
and local jurisdictions may adopt model building codes developed by 
nonprofit organizations, such as the American Society of Heating, 
Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers' (ASHRAE) Standard 90.1 
and the International Code Council's (ICC) International Energy 
Conservation Code (IECC). Both ASHRAE and ICC publish codes for 
commercial and residential buildings. 

ASHRAE uses a consensus and public hearing process to develop its model 
building codes. It involves the design community, including architects 
and lighting and mechanical designers; the code enforcement community, 
including building code officials and state regulatory agencies; 
building owners and operators; manufacturers and utility companies; and 
representatives from the Department of Energy (DOE), energy 
organizations, and the academic community. ICC uses a different process 
to develop its model building codes. Under its process, anyone can 
propose a code, and the IECC code development committee, which includes 
mostly building code officials, votes on the proposals. According to 
staff at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL), which 
monitors state building codes for DOE, although ASHRAE and ICC use 
different processes to develop their model building codes, the two 
organizations incorporate each other's codes into their own when they 
revise them. As a result, ASHRAE and ICC codes that are revised at 
about the same time generally have similar energy efficiency 
provisions. 

The Energy Conservation and Production Act, as amended (the Act), 
directs DOE to evaluate revisions to these model building codes and 
publish its determinations of whether the revision would improve energy 
efficiency. For commercial buildings, defined by DOE to include 
buildings other than low-rise residential buildings, the Act directs 
DOE to evaluate ASHRAE's revisions to its Standard 90.1. Each time 
ASHRAE revises Standard 90.1, DOE has 12 months to determine whether 
the revision will improve energy efficiency in commercial buildings and 
publish a notice of that determination in the Federal Register. For 
residential buildings, defined by DOE as low-rise residential 
buildings, the Act directs DOE to evaluate revisions the Council of 
American Building Officials (CABO) makes to its Model Energy Code 
(MEC), or any successor to that code. In 1995, the ICC succeeded CABO 
and, as such, the IECC replaced the MEC. Each time the ICC revises the 
IECC, DOE has 12 months to determine whether the revision will improve 
energy efficiency in residential buildings and publish a notice of that 
determination in the Federal Register. The Act does not specify what 
type of revision triggers the start of the 12-month period for either 
commercial or residential determinations; but, according to DOE 
officials, the 12-month period is triggered by ASHRAE's and ICC's 
publication of revised codes. 

The Act provides that if the Secretary determines that a revision to 
ASHRAE's or ICC's model building code will improve energy efficiency-- 
called a positive determination--states "shall" review their building 
codes. For commercial model building codes, each state has 2 years 
after DOE publishes a positive determination on a revised ASHRAE model 
building code to certify to DOE that it has reviewed and updated the 
provisions of its commercial building code in accordance with the 
revised code. For residential model building codes, each state also has 
2 years after a positive determination for certification, but it must 
certify to DOE that it has reviewed the provisions of its residential 
building code and determined whether it is appropriate to update them 
to meet or exceed the revised code. Subsequent to enactment of these 
provisions, the Supreme Court ruled that the constitution does not 
allow Congress to require states to regulate a matter.[Footnote 13] DOE 
program managers told us that DOE does not require states to review 
their codes following a positive determination.[Footnote 14] Instead, 
the managers told us, DOE facilitates states' efforts to adopt revised 
codes. PNNL officials told us they assist DOE on all aspects of the 
building code determinations and provide training and technical 
assistance to state and local officials responsible for building codes. 

As of August 2006, ASHRAE and ICC have published a combined total of 
nine revisions to their model building codes for DOE to evaluate. 
ASHRAE revised Standard 90.1 three times, and CABO revised the MEC 
twice before it was incorporated into ICC in 1995. The ICC issued its 
first version of the IECC in 1998 and has since revised it three times. 
Deadlines for DOE's determinations have come due on all these 
revisions, except the 2006 IECC revision, which will be due in January 
2007. 

We were asked to report on (1) whether DOE has met its statutory 
deadlines for determining if states should adopt revised commercial 
model building codes, (2) whether DOE has met its statutory deadlines 
for determining if states should consider adopting revisions to the 
residential model building code, and (3) whether and, if so, to what 
extent DOE tracks states' building codes. This appendix contains 
information about these objectives. 

To address the commercial and residential building code determinations 
DOE has completed, we reviewed the requirements and deadlines for 
building code determinations contained in statute and DOE 
determinations published in the Federal Register. We also interviewed 
and obtained documents from officials at DOE, PNNL, ASHRAE, ICC, and 
the American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy. Since DOE program 
officials use ASHRAE's and ICC's revision publication dates as the 
trigger date for DOE's deadlines for making determinations, we used 
these dates for our analysis. We did not attempt to determine why DOE 
might miss deadlines for determinations or why individual states adopt 
building codes. 

DOE Has Completed One of Three Commercial Building Code Determinations: 

DOE has completed only one of three commercial model building code 
determinations that have come due. DOE issued a positive determination 
for the first of three revisions to ASHRAE's Standard 90.1 about 17 
months after the deadline. As of December 2006, DOE had not completed 
determinations for either of the remaining revisions and has decided to 
combine them. Table 5 provides details about the revisions' publication 
dates, the deadlines for the determinations, and the status of DOE's 
reviews. 

Table 5: Status of DOE's Review of ASHRAE Standard 90.1 Revisions: 

ASHRAE revision: ASHRAE Standard 90.1-1999; 
Revision publication date: January 28, 2000; 
DOE determination due date: January 28, 2001; 
DOE determination issue date: July 15, 2002; 
DOE determination status: Completed over 17 months late; 
State certification due date: July 15, 2004. 

ASHRAE revision: ASHRAE Standard 90.1-2001; 
Revision publication date: November 7, 2001; 
DOE determination due date: November 7, 2002; 
DOE determination issue date: None; 
DOE determination status: Incomplete and over 4 years late; 
State certification due date: 2 years after DOE issues the 
determination. 

ASHRAE revision: ASHRAE Standard 90.1-2004; 
Revision publication date: December 21, 2004; 
DOE determination due date: December, 21, 2005; 
DOE determination issue date: None; 
DOE determination status: Incomplete and over 1 year late; 
State certification due date: 2 years after DOE issues the 
determination. 

Sources: GAO analysis of ASHRAE, DOE, and Federal Register data. 

[End of table] 

DOE Has Completed Four of Five Residential Building Code 
Determinations: 

DOE has completed four of five residential building code determinations 
that have come due. DOE issued determinations for all of these four 
CABO/ICC revisions to the MEC/IECC and said the revisions would improve 
energy efficiency. DOE completed its first determination on time and 
completed the next three from 1 month to over 1 year late. As of 
December 2006, DOE had not yet completed the determination for the 
fifth IECC revision. Table 6 provides details about the revisions' 
publication dates, the due dates for the determinations, and the status 
of DOE's reviews. 

Table 6: Status of DOE's Review of MEC and IECC Revisions: 

CABO/ICC revision: 1993 MEC; 
Revision publication date: October 21, 1993; 
DOE determination due date: October 21, 1994; 
DOE determination issue date: July 15, 1994; 
DOE determination status: Completed over 3 months early; 
State certification due date: July 15, 1996. 

CABO/ICC revision: 1995 MEC; 
Revision publication date: April 12, 1995; 
DOE determination due date: April 12, 1996; 
DOE determination issue date: December 6, 1996; 
DOE determination status: Completed over 7 months late; 
State certification due date: December 6, 1998. 

CABO/ICC revision: 1998 IECC; 
Revision publication date: May 13, 1998; 
DOE determination due date: May13, 1999; 
DOE determination issue date: January 10, 2001; 
DOE determination status: Completed over 1 year late; 
State certification due date: January 10, 2003. 

CABO/ICC revision: 2000 IECC; 
Revision publication date: December 30, 1999; 
DOE determination due date: December 30, 2000; 
DOE determination issue date: January 10, 2001; 
DOE determination status: Completed less than 1 month late; 
State certification due date: January 10, 2003. 

CABO/ICC revision: 2003 IECC; 
Revision publication date: January 27, 2003; 
DOE determination due date: January 27, 2004; 
DOE determination issue date: None; 
DOE determination status: Incomplete, 2 years and 11 months late; 
State certification due date: 2 years after DOE issues the 
determination. 

CABO/ICC revision: 2006 IECC; 
Revision publication date: January 15, 2006; 
DOE determination due date: January 15, 2007; 
DOE determination issue date: None; 
DOE determination status: Not yet due; 
State certification due date: 2 years after DOE issues the 
determination. 

Sources: GAO analysis of ASHRAE, DOE, and Federal Register data. 

[End of table] 

DOE Tracks States' Building Codes: 

DOE and PNNL staff track states' commercial and residential building 
codes and publish information about them on DOE's Web site. PNNL staff 
told us they e-mail state officials twice a year to confirm that DOE 
has the most current information about the states' commercial and 
residential building codes and to obtain any updated information. 
Additionally, they are in frequent contact with the states and 
continually update their information on states' building codes. DOE's 
Web site reports the type of code adopted by each state and whether 
builder compliance with the code is voluntary or mandatory, and 
provides limited information about the stringency of the code, which 
PNNL staff determines by analyzing the state-provided information. For 
example, DOE's Web site reports that Florida has adopted mandatory 
codes for both commercial and residential buildings and that the 
commercial building code is more stringent than the ASHRAE 90.1 2001, 
and the residential building code is more stringent than the 2000 IECC. 
The complete list of state commercial and residential building codes 
for energy efficiency is available at [Hyperlink, 
http://www.energycodes.gov/implement/state_codes/state_status_full.php].
 

Although the information published on DOE's Web site compares the 
stringency of state codes with ASHRAE's and ICC's model building codes, 
PNNL staff told us the information should not be used to judge the 
stringency of state codes relative to the ASHRAE's and ICC codes for 
which DOE has made a determination. The staff explained that while more 
recent state codes are generally more energy efficient than older state 
codes, there are other factors that affect their stringency. For 
example, states may adopt DOE's latest determination on ASHRAE's and 
ICC's codes as their state building codes, but may amend them to be 
weaker or stronger. For example, according to PNNL staff, Georgia 
adopted the latest DOE residential determination but amended to it to 
be more similar to prior DOE determinations. In other cases, the 
changes to a revised code may not affect all states equally; therefore, 
while a state may not have adopted the most recent revision, the 
changes in that revision may not have applied to that state anyway. For 
example, PNNL staff told us that, although Massachusetts did not adopt 
the 2000 IECC, the differences between the 2000 IECC and the 1995 MEC, 
which Massachusetts did adopt, did not apply to that state. Therefore, 
PNNL staff consider Massachusetts's code to be as stringent as the 2000 
IECC. Furthermore, PNNL staff told us that, while some states have 
adopted model building codes that are more recent than those for which 
DOE has issued a determination, these codes should not be assumed to be 
more stringent than those for which DOE has made a determination until 
PNNL makes a comparable technical analysis. PNNL staff told us that 
they have the information and technical capability to compare the 
stringency of all the state codes with those for which DOE has made a 
determination. However, they said they typically analyze building codes 
on a state-by-state basis only at DOE's request and that they do not 
currently have a comprehensive analysis of how all states' codes 
compare to DOE's latest determinations. As of September 2006, DOE had 
not directed PNNL to complete a comprehensive analysis. DOE officials 
told us that DOE focuses on facilitating states' efforts to adopt 
building codes rather than penalizing them for not meeting DOE building 
code determinations and, as such, they do not believe a comprehensive 
analysis of which states' building codes are as stringent as those for 
which DOE has made a positive determination justifies the resources it 
would require. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Objectives, Scope, and Method: 

Our objectives were to examine (1) the extent to which DOE has met its 
statutory obligations to issue rules on minimum energy efficiency 
standards for consumer products and industrial equipment and (2) 
whether DOE's plans are likely to clear the backlog of required 
rulemakings and whether these plans could be improved. 

To address these objectives, we reviewed the statutory requirements and 
deadlines for developing energy efficiency standards for consumer 
products and industrial equipment, program information available on 
DOE's Web site, information provided by program staff, and DOE's 
January 2006 and August 2006 reports to Congress. For the purposes of 
our review, we did not include the 17 additional product categories 
that the Energy Policy Act of 2005 added to DOE's responsibilities, 
including the one that came due in August 2006. Although DOE is also 
required to issue rules regarding standards for plumbing products, we 
excluded them from this report because they primarily involve 
conserving water, rather than energy. Furthermore, we did not evaluate 
the merit of the standards DOE has issued. 

We conducted interviews with DOE program officials; officials of the 
Office of General Counsel; officials at Lawrence Berkeley National 
Laboratory, the National Energy Technology Laboratory, and the National 
Institute of Standards and Technology; and a regulatory process expert 
at the Department of Transportation. We also interviewed officials at 
the American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy; the Appliance 
Standards Awareness Project; the American Society of Heating, 
Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers; the California Energy 
Commission; Pacific Gas and Electric Company; and Natural Resources 
Canada; and obtained documentation as needed. We analyzed data on DOE's 
rulemaking process, estimates of national energy savings from energy 
efficiency standards, and program resources. 

In addition, we used a Web-based, modified Delphi method to obtain 
views from a panel of 33 stakeholders on the causes and effects of 
delays in setting standards and on proposed solutions to these delays. 
The Delphi method is a systematic process for obtaining individuals' 
views on a question or problem of interest and, if possible, obtaining 
consensus. Our modified Delphi method had two phases. Phase 1 consisted 
of a series of open-ended questions concerning DOE's delays. In Phase 
2, panel members rated the significance or priority of the causes of 
delays, effects of delays, and solutions to delays that they had 
identified in phase 1. 

We selected the panel members from a group of stakeholders who were 
both widely recognized as knowledgeable about one or more key aspects 
of energy efficiency standards, and who were involved or familiar with 
DOE's rulemaking process. The group included officials from federal and 
state agencies, manufacturers, trade associations, energy efficiency 
advocacy groups, consumer interest groups, utilities, and utility 
associations, some of whom were previously employed by DOE as 
participants in the rulemaking process. We used a variety of methods to 
determine that the panelists we selected had the expertise necessary to 
participate in the panel. A list of the 33 panel members is included in 
appendix IV. To report panel results, when two-thirds or more of the 
panel agreed, we use the term "most." When one-half of more of the 
panel agreed, we use the term "the majority." 

We conducted our review from June 2005 through January 2007 in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: Rulemakings and Delays for Consumer Products and 
Industrial Equipment with Deadlines That Have Passed: 

Consumer products. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: Clothes washers; 
First rule: Due date: 01/01/90; 
First rule: Actual date: 05/14/91; 
First rule: Years delayed[A]: 1.4; 
Second rule: Due date: 01/ 01/95; 
Second rule: Actual date: 01/12/01; 
Second rule: Years delayed[A]: 6.0. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: Refrigerators, 
refrigerator-freezers, and freezers; 
First rule: Due date: 07/01/89; 
First rule: Actual date: 11/17/89; 
First rule: Years delayed[A]: 0.4; 
Second rule: Due date: 07/01/94; 
Second rule: Actual date: 04/ 28/97; 
Second rule: Years delayed[A]: 2.8. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: Small furnaces; 
First rule: Due date: 01/01/89; 
First rule: Actual date: 11/17/89; 
First rule: Years delayed[A]: 0.9; 
Second rule: Due date: Included in "Furnaces" deadline[B]; 
Second rule: Actual date: N/A; 
Second rule: Years delayed[A]: N/A. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: Central air 
conditioners and heat pumps; 
First rule: Due date: 01/01/94; 
First rule: Actual date: 01/22/01; 
First rule: Years delayed[A]: 7.1; 
Second rule: Due date: 01/01/01; 
Second rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
Second rule: Years delayed[A]: 6.0. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: Clothes dryers; 
First rule: Due date: 01/01/90; 
First rule: Actual date: 05/14/91; 
First rule: Years delayed[A]: 1.4; 
Second rule: Due date: 01/ 01/95; 
Second rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
Second rule: Years delayed[A]: 12.0. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: Dishwashers; 
First rule: Due date: 01/01/90; 
First rule: Actual date: 05/14/91; 
First rule: Years delayed[A]: 1.4; 
Second rule: Due date: 01/01/95; 
Second rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
Second rule: Years delayed[A]: 12.0. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: Fluorescent lamp 
ballasts; 
First rule: Due date: 01/01/92; 
First rule: Actual date: 09/ 19/00; 
First rule: Years delayed[A]: 8.7; 
Second rule: Due date: 01/01/97; 
Second rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
Second rule: Years delayed[A]: 10.0. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: Room air 
conditioners; 
First rule: Due date: 01/01/92; 
First rule: Actual date: 09/24/97; 
First rule: Years delayed[A]: 5.7; 
Second rule: Due date: 01/01/97; 
Second rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
Second rule: Years delayed[A]: 10.0. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: Water heaters; 
First rule: Due date: 01/01/92; 
First rule: Actual date: 01/17/01; 
First rule: Years delayed[A]: 9.0; 
Second rule: Due date: 01/01/00; 
Second rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
Second rule: Years delayed[A]: 7.0. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: Direct heating 
equipment; 
First rule: Due date: 01/01/92; 
First rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
First rule: Years delayed[A]: 15.0; 
Second rule: Due date: 01/01/00; 
Second rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
Second rule: Years delayed[A]: 7.0. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: Furnaces; 
First rule: Due date: 01/01/94; 
First rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
First rule: Years delayed[A]: 13.0; 
Second rule: Due date: 01/01/07; 
Second rule: Actual date: Not due; 
Second rule: Years delayed[A]: Not due. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: General service 
fluorescent lamps and incandescent reflector lamps; 
First rule: Due date: 04/24/97; 
First rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
First rule: Years delayed[A]: 9.7; 
Second rule: Due date: 04/24/02; 
Second rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
Second rule: Years delayed[A]: 4.7. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: Additional general 
service fluorescent and general service incandescent lamps; 
First rule: Due date: 11/15/98; 
First rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
First rule: Years delayed[A]: 8.1; 
Second rule: Due date: Included in general service fluorescent lamps 
and incandescent reflector lamps deadline[C]; 
Second rule: Actual date: N/A; 
Second rule: Years delayed[A]: N/A. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: Kitchen ranges and 
ovens; 
First rule: Due date: 01/01/92; 
First rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
First rule: Years delayed[A]: 15.0; 
Second rule: Due date: 01/01/97; 
Second rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
Second rule: Years delayed[A]: 10.0. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: Mobile home 
furnaces; 
First rule: Due date: 01/01/92; 
First rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
First rule: Years delayed[A]: 15.0; 
Second rule: Due date: Included in Furnaces deadline[B]; 
Second rule: Actual date: N/A; 
Second rule: Years delayed[A]: N/A. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: Pool heaters; 
First rule: Due date: 01/01/92; 
First rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
First rule: Years delayed[A]: 15.0; 
Second rule: Due date: 01/01/00; 
Second rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
Second rule: Years delayed[A]: 7.0. 

Industrial equipment. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: Electric motors-not 
requiring national certification; 
First rule: Due date: 10/24/99; 
First rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
First rule: Years delayed[A]: 7.2; 
Second rule: Due date: 10/24/04; 
Second rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
Second rule: Years delayed[A]: 2.2. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: Electric motors- 
requiring national certification; 
First rule: Due date: 10/24/01; 
First rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
First rule: Years delayed[A]: 5.2; 
Second rule: Due date: 10/24/06; 
Second rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
Second rule: Years delayed[A]: 0.2. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: Distribution 
transformers; 
First rule: Due date: 10/24/96[D]; 
First rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
First rule: Years delayed[A]: 10.2; 
Second rule: Due date: N/A; 
Second rule: Actual date: N/A; 
Second rule: Years delayed[A]: N/A. 

Consumer product or industrial equipment category: Small electric 
motors; 
First rule: Due date: 10/24/96[D]; 
First rule: Actual date: Overdue; 
First rule: Years delayed[A]: 10.2; 
Second rule: Due date: N/A; 
Second rule: Actual date: N/A; 
Second rule: Years delayed[A]: N/A. 

Source: GAO analysis of DOE data. 

[A] Calculations for years delayed for overdue rules are as of December 
31, 2006. 

[B] Subsequent updates to standards for the category called Furnaces 
are intended to cover updates for mobile home furnaces and small 
furnaces and are included in the Furnaces deadlines. 

[C] Subsequent updates to standards for the category called "General 
service fluorescent lamps and incandescent reflector lamps" are 
intended to cover updates for "Additional general service fluorescent 
lamps and incandescent reflector lamps" and are included in the 
Furnaces deadlines. 

[D] Deadline for setting initial standard following determination of 
feasibility (18 months after publication of testing requirements.) 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix IV: Participants in Energy Efficiency Standards Delphi Panel: 

Karim Amrane: 
Air-Conditioning and Refrigeration Institute: 

Donald Brundage: 
Southern Company: 

David Calabrese: 
Association of Home Appliance Manufacturers: 

Thomas Catania: 
Whirlpool Corporation: 

Sue Coakley: 
Northeast Energy Efficiency Partnerships: 

James Crawford Trane and American Standard: 

Andrew deLaski: 
Appliance Standards Awareness Project: 

Thomas Eckman: 
Northwest Power and Conservation Council: 

Andrew Fanara: 
Environmental Protection Agency: 

Gary Fernstrom: 
Pacific Gas and Electric: 

David Goldstein: 
Natural Resources Defense Council: 

Mel Hall-Crawford: 
Consumer Federation of America: 

Carl Hiller: 
Applied Energy Technology: 

John Holt: 
National Rural Electric Cooperative Association: 

Earl Jones: 
GE Consumer & Industrial: 

Joseph Mattingly: 
Association of Appliance & Equipment Manufacturers: 

James McMahon: 
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory: 

Deborah Miller: 
ICF Consulting: 

Harry Misuriello: 
Alliance to Save Energy: 

Jim Mullen: 
Lennox International Inc. 

Steven Nadel: 
American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy: 

Kyle Pitsor: 
National Electrical Manufacturers Association: 

James Ranfone: 
American Gas Association: 

Priscilla Richards: 
New York State Energy Research and Development Authority: 

Michael Rivest: 
Navigant Consulting, Inc. 

Steve Rosenstock: 
Edison Electric Institute: 

Michael Sherman: 
Massachusetts Division of Energy Resources: 

Doug Smith: 
Van Ness Feldman: 

Sriram Somasundaram: 
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory: 

David Steiner: 
Maytag Corporation: 

Charlie Stephens: 
Oregon Department of Energy: 

Tim Stout: 
National Grid USA: 

John Wilson: 
California Energy Commission: 

[End of section] 

Appendix V: Comments from the Department of Energy: 

Department of Energy: 
Washington, DC 20585: 

January 12, 2007: 

Mr. Jim Wells: 
Director, Natural Resources and Environment: 
Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, N.W. 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Mr. Wells: 

Thank you for the opportunity to comment on the Draft Report, Energy 
Efficiency: Long-Standing Problems with DOE's Program for Setting 
Efficiency Standards Continue to Result in Forgone Energy Savings (GAO- 
07-42). 

We commend the Government Accountability Office (GAO) for the work it 
has done to gather input from many individuals and organizations in 
preparing its draft report. The report details the long history of the 
Department of Energy's program relating to energy efficiency for 
consumer appliances and industrial equipment, and describes delays that 
have occurred in the issuance of efficiency standards since the 
program's inception in 1975. 

It is important to recognize that past delays were the result of many 
different factors over the course of many years. The delays have 
spanned Administrations of both parties, several Secretaries of Energy, 
and various Departmental offices and personnel. As a result, it is 
simply incorrect to assign sole or even primary blame for these delays 
to any particular office, official, decision, or process. The review 
panel used by the GAO apparently attempted to assign primary blame for 
the program's delays to the Department's Office of the General Counsel, 
but any attempt to do so reflects an overly simplistic and largely 
incorrect understanding of the program's complexity and the 
interrelated work that is performed by different Departmental offices, 
individuals, and contractors. Departmental offices work collaboratively 
on this program. Even though certain office work logs may reflect that 
a specific office has possession of a certain document over a 
particular period of time, it is often the case that during this period 
of time, multiple different individuals in different individual offices 
are working together to identify, address and resolve issues associated 
with the document. 

Moreover, the report does not capture the many recent steps forward and 
the progress made by this program particularly since enactment of the 
Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPACT 2005). Secretary Bodman has made this 
program a personal priority and has produced significant results in the 
last 18 months. Additionally, the benefits that will be achieved by 
appliance standards put in place between 1988 and 2007 are estimated to 
add up to a savings of 55.4 quads and $133.3 billion net present value 
through the year 2030. 

Our plans and our commitment are well documented. On January 312006, 
Department submitted to Congress our first Energy Conservation 
Standards Activities report in accordance with section 141 of EPACT 
2005. That report covered the history of the program but more 
importantly set forth an action plan for the future. On August 8, 2006, 
the Department submitted its second report detailing the progress made 
in implementing that plan. Those reports confirm that the Department's 
accomplishments demonstrate the serious commitment that the Department 
has made to fulfill its obligations. 

Rulemaking activities that have been completed since the EPACT 2005 was 
enacted: 

* Ceiling Fan Light Kits - 72 FR 1270 - January 11, 2007: 

* Residential Clothes Washers Petition for Exemption - 71 FR 78157 - 
December 28, 2006: 

* Test Procedures Prescribed in EPACT 2005 requiring clarification and 
codification - 71 FR 71340 - December 8, 2006: 

* Small Electric Motors Determination - 71 FR 38799 - July 10, 2006: 

* Test Procedures for Distribution Transformers - 71 FR 24972 - April 
27, 2006: 

* Schedule Setting Public Meeting - 70 FR 61395 - October 24, 2005: 

* Codification of energy conservation standards prescribed in EPACT 
2005 - 70 FR 60407 - October 18, 2005: 

* Test Procedures for Central Air Conditioners and Heat Pumps - 70 FR 
59122 - October 11, 2005: 

We also have made significant progress on the following rulemakings 
that were previously initiated and that we plan to complete this year: 

* Furnaces and Boilers - Final Rule Scheduled for September 2007: 

* Distribution Transformers - Final Rule Scheduled for September 2007: 

* Commercial Heating, Air-Conditioning and Water Heating Equipment - 
Final Rule Scheduled for February 2007: 

* Test Procedures for Residential Air Conditioners and Heat Pumps - 
Final Rule Scheduled for September 2007: 

Additional appliance rulemaking activities during this time included: 

* Test Procedures for Distribution Transformers Technical Amendment - 
71 FR 60662 - October 16, 2006: 

* Test Procedures Prescribed in EPACT 2005 requiring clarification and 
codification PROPOSED RULE - 71 FR 42178 - July 25, 2006: 

* Test Procedures for Central Air Conditioners and Heat Pumps Proposed 
Rule - 71 FR 41320 - July 20, 2006: 

* Covered Products Household Definition - PROPOSED RULE 71 FR 26275 - 
May 4, 2006: 

* Distribution Transformers Test Procedures Information Collection 
Notice - 71 FR 24844 - April 27, 2006: 

* Commercial Heating, Air Conditioning and Water Heating Equipment 
Notice and Comment Period - 71 FR 12634 - March 13, 2006: 

* Residential Clothes Washers Petition for Exemption - 71 FR 6022 - 
February 6, 2006: 

Following is a listing of notices regarding appliance standards 
rulemakings that have been issued since the report was submitted to 
Congress in January 2006: 

* Battery Chargers and External Power Supplies - 71 FR 78389 - December 
29, 2006: 

* Residential Water Heaters - 71 FR 67825 - November 24, 2006: 

* Direct Heating Equipment - 71 FR 67825 - November 24, 2006: 

* Pool Heaters - 71 FR 67825 - November 24, 2006: 

* Refrigerated Bottle or Canned Beverage Vending Machines Test 
Procedures - 71 FR 58308 - October 3, 2006: 

* Refrigerated Bottle or Canned Beverage Vending Machines Standards - 
71 FR 36715 - June 28, 2006: 

* Incandescent Reflector Lamps - 71 FR 30834 - May 31, 2006: 

* Fluorescent Lamps - 71 FR 30834 - May 31, 2006: 

* Incandescent General Service Lamps - 71 FR 30834 - May 31, 2006: 

* Ice-Cream Freezers, Self-Contained Commercial Refrigerators, 
Freezers, and Refrigerator-Freezers without doors, and remote- 
condensing commercial refrigerators, freezers and refrigerator- 
freezers - 71 FR 23876 - April 25, 2006: 

* Residential Dishwashers - 71 FR 15059 - March 27, 2006: 

* Ranges and Ovens and Microwave Ovens - 71 FR 15059 - March 27, 2006: 

* Residential Dehumidifiers - 71 FR 15059 - March 27, 2006: 

* Commercial Clothes Washers - 71 FR 15059 - March 27, 2006: 

There are many other standards related accomplishments that we could 
list but we simply want to make the point that the Department is 
aggressively developing energy conservation standards. That fact was 
not evident in GAO's draft report and should be of interest to members 
of Congress and also to the taxpayers supporting this program. 
Additionally, the Department entered into a consent decree with 
multiple plaintiffs that sets forth a schedule for completing the 
backlog of energy efficiency standards for appliances; that schedule is 
commensurate with the schedule in the Department's January 2006 Report 
to Congress. The United States District Court for the Southern District 
of New York entered that consent order on November 6, 2006. 

We have met all of the commitments that have come due since our first 
report containing our action plan was submitted to Congress on January 
31, 2006. The draft GAO report stated that "most panelists rated the 
components of DOE's plan highly and expect that it will help DOE meet 
the deadlines of its catch-up schedule if these actions are 
implemented." The combined increase in rulemaking activities and the 
performance record since the report was submitted should emphatically 
answer any question you may have regarding the Departments commitment 
and abilities. 

If you have any questions concerning DOE's comments on this Draft 
Report, please contact me at (202) 586-9220. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Alexander A. Karsner: 
Assistant Secretary: 
Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy: 

[End of section] 

Appendix VI: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Jim Wells, (202) 512-3841, wellsj@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the individual named above, Karla Springer, Assistant 
Director; Tim Bober; Kevin Bray; Valerie Colaiaco; Janelle Knox; Megan 
McNeely; Lynn Musser; Alison O'Neill; Don Pless; Bill Roach; Frank 
Rusco; Ilga Semeiks; and Carol Herrnstadt Shulman made key 
contributions to this report. 

FOOTNOTES 

[1] DOE's energy efficiency standards program is separate from the 
Energy Star program, which is a joint DOE-Environmental Protection 
Agency voluntary labeling program that identifies and promotes the 
products that meet the most efficient energy conservation standards. 

[2] GAO, Energy Conservation: Appliance Standards and Labeling Programs 
Can Be Improved, GAO/RCED-93-102 (Washington, D.C.: March 1993). 

[3] Department of Energy, Energy Conservation Standards Activities. 
(Washington, D.C.: Jan. 31, 2006). 

[4] The second report, released in August 2006, reiterated the catch-up 
plan and reported on DOE's actions toward clearing the backlog. These 
actions include making progress on and issuing rules related to the 
standards-setting process, but none established new standards for the 
products and equipment included in the scope of this report. 

[5] This reported backlog did not include an additional 17 product 
categories added by EPAct 2005 to DOE's mandate for setting energy 
efficiency standards, 9 of which have deadlines for DOE rulemakings. 
These additional responsibilities were not part of our review. 

[6] California has set standards for products not covered under federal 
law, such as commercial clothes washers and external power supplies for 
electronic devices such as laptop computers, mobile phones, printers, 
and digital cameras. 

[7] Before DOE published proposed distribution transformer standards, 
the Energy Policy Act of 2005 established energy conservation standards 
for low-voltage, dry-type distribution transformers. Pub. L. No. 109-58 
§135(c)(3) (codified at 42 U.S.C. § 6295(v)). Consequently, DOE's 
proposed standards do not apply to these types. 71 Fed. Reg. 44,356, 
44,357 (Aug. 4, 2006). 

[8] A megawatt is a measure of a flow of electricity; 1,000 megawatts 
is a sufficient flow of electricity to power about 750,000 homes. 

[9] Procedures for Consideration of New or Revised Energy Conservation 
Standards for Consumer Products, Final Rule, 61 Fed. Reg. 36,973 (July 
15, 1996). 

[10] GAO, Agencies' Annual Performance Plans Under the Results Act, 
GAO/GGD/AIMD-10.1.18 (Washington, D.C.: February 1998). 

[11] The Unified Agenda (also known as the Semiannual Regulatory 
Agenda), published twice a year in the Federal Register, summarizes the 
rules and proposed rules that each federal agency expects to issue 
during the next 6 months. 

[12] The PMF program is a 2-year paid government fellowship sponsored 
by the Office of Personnel Management for recent graduate students who 
seek a professional experience in the U.S. government. 

[13] New York v. United States, 505 U.S. 144 (1992) (holding that a 
provision of the Low-Level Radioactive Waste Policy Act, requiring 
states to take ownership of waste or regulate according to instructions 
of Congress, was invalid). The court also stated that Congress may hold 
out incentives to the states as a means of encouraging them to adopt 
suggested regulatory schemes and offer states the choice of regulating 
an activity according to federal standards or having state law 
preempted by federal regulation. 

[14] A DOE staff member noted that the Energy Conservation and 
Production Act, as amended, does not contain a provision authorizing 
DOE to enforce these provisions. 

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