Title: ENERGY STAR for Set-top Boxes
1ENERGY STAR for Set-top Boxes
- Katharine Kaplan, US EPA
- National Workshop on ENERGY STAR
- Set-top Boxes, Toronto, Canada
- June 25, 2009
2Presentation Overview
- Why are climate issues increasingly important?
- What is ENERGY STAR?
- How can it help address climate issues?
- ENERGY STARs approach for CE/IT products
- Why ENERGY STAR for STBs?
- Goals for the ENERGY STAR set-top box and service
provider programs - Requirements intended to deliver on these goals
- General partner commitments, such as labeling and
reporting - Service provider purchase/fleet requirements
- Technical specification for boxesÂ
- Program success to date
3Global Warming Climate Change is Real IPCC
Issues Two Reports in 2007
- Report based on 29,000 sets of data and was
reached by consensus of 2,500 scientists - Declare 90 certainty that global warming is
caused by humans - Poor countries will suffer from increased hunger
and water shortages - North America will see more hurricanes, floods,
droughts, heat waves, and wildfires - Africa will be hardest hit Europe will see its
Alpine glaciers disappear - 30 of all species face extinction if global
temperatures rise a predicted 3.6 degrees in the
next century
4McKinsey, December 2007, U.S. GHG Abatement
Mapping Initiative
5We are facing large transmission generation
investments in an uncertain economic environment
6Future Directions with Climate Change
- New Administration just beginning
- Climate goals of 14 reduction from 2005 by 2020
and 83 reduction by 2050 - Waxman/Markey Climate and Clean Energy Discussion
draft - Linkage of climate and energy issues, along with
consideration of economic needs - Interest in a mix of policy approaches
- Cap and Trade
- Other policies targeting renewables, energy
efficiency, RD, etc.
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7What is ENERGY STAR?
- ENERGY STAR is a government-backed program
dedicated to helping individuals protect the
environment through superior energy efficiency - Products that have earned the ENERGY STAR meet
strict energy-efficiency guidelines set by the US
Environmental Protection Agency and the US
Department of Energy - These products not only cut customers energy
costs, but also help protect the environment - Saving energy reduces the burning of fossil
fuels, which leads to less air pollution and
ultimately reduces global warming
8Why ENERGY STAR?
- ENERGY STAR is the only environmental brand which
cuts across all trends and segments, offering a
consumer platform which fills both pragmatic
needs for energy savings and environmental
aspirations of global warming reduction - ENERGY STAR makes it easy to offer environmental
products that have an added money savings benefit
and for customers to find them - ENERGY STAR increases sales
- Over 500M qualified products were sold in 2007
alone - The cumulative number of ENERGY STAR products
sold since 2000 is more than 2.5 billion - ENERGY STAR offers expert educational content on
energy and environmental savings - ENERGY STAR means products that are feature-rich
and high performance with lower environmental
impacts - ENERGY STAR is a trusted and recognized brand
- 66 of consumers indicate that they are more
likely to purchase an item due to the presence
of the ENERGY STAR logo (2007 LOHAS Report) - 82 of people report having seen the ENERGY STAR
logo. As a comparison, 86 report having seen the
recycling chasing arrows (09/08 CEA poll)
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9Consumer Interest in Efficient Products
- 98 of consumers agree or strongly agree that it
is important to save energy in their homes - 93 of consumers agree or strongly agree that
saving energy helps the environment - 79 of consumers agree or strongly agree that
people should try to use less energy to reduce
the need to build new power plants
10ENERGY STAR Brand Influence
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11ENERGY STAR Recognition Influence
- More than 75 of American households recognize
the ENERGY STAR label - More than 75 of households have a high or
general understanding of the ENERGY STAR label - More than 35 of US households knowingly
purchased an ENERGY STAR-labeled product in the
past year. Of these purchasers - More than 75 report the label as influential in
their purchasing decision - More than 80 report they are likely to recommend
ENERGY STAR qualified products to friends (35 of
these households reported they were "extremely"
likely to recommend ENERGY STAR-labeled products)
12The ENERGY STAR ICT Roadmap
- EPA has a 15-year relationship with the ICT
industry. ENERGY STAR has grown to meet demands
of a rapidly-changing market for CE and IT
products from desktops to notebooks and game
consoles in the home, and now servers and storage
in the data center. - Challenges include revising existing specs to
keep pace with product development addressing
more highly-integrated, feature-rich products
and expanding ENERGY STAR into new product
categories. - Current ICT specification updates
- New requirements have recently taken effect for
Computer Servers and Set Top Boxes - New requirements are pending for Computers,
Displays, and Imaging Equipment - Specifications are under development for
Audio/Video, Televisions, Computer Servers, and
Enterprise Storage - Specifications for Home Networking Equipment and
Enterprise UPS products are pending - Expect EPA to
- Refine existing and create new ENERGY STAR
product specifications - Encourage globally-harmonized test procedures and
product specifications - Raise awareness of nexus between ITs energy
footprint and whole-building energy performance - Study the energy savings potential of IT
- More info at www.energystar.gov/productdevelopment
13Average Household Electricity Consumption for Key
Products
Residential Miscellaneous Electric Loads Energy
Consumption Characterization and Savings
Potential, TIAX LLC, finalized July 2007.
14Percentage of Households with at Least One Device
- Cable STB 45
- Satellite STB 25
Residential Miscellaneous Electric Loads Energy
Consumption Characterization and Savings
Potential, TIAX LLC, finalized July 2007.
15Goals for ENERGY STAR Set-top Box Program
- Develop a STB program that drives for the
greatest energy savings practical for this
category - Identify appropriate roles and responsibilities
for all relevant stakeholders - Develop energy efficiency specifications for STBs
that are performance-based recognizing leaders
in the market in terms of energy efficiency - Make use of existing test procedures and
harmonize, where technically appropriate, with
domestic and international partners on both test
procedures and requirements - Develop Program Requirements that offer longevity
as well as fair comparison of products, and
consideration of feature richness
16Why Service Providers?
- Service providers influence application vendors
- Service providers control much of the behavior of
devices on their network, affecting energy
consumption - Service providers control the network and the
network protocol definitions through CableLabs
17Roles of Service Providers and OEMs
- ENERGY STAR has chosen to qualify
- Products from OEMs/box manufacturers
- Service providers
- ENERGY STAR
- Provides incentives for OEMs to
- Develop new energy saving technologies
- Decrease the overall energy consumption in
periods of use and non-use - Provides incentives for service providers to
- Buy and maintain efficient STBs
- Educate consumers on the benefits of ENERGY STAR
- Ensure those new technologies are utilized
18General Partner Commitments for Service Providers
- Purchase and/or deploy qualified STBs
- Ensure STBs maintain qualification
- Deploy user interface to permit disabling of
speculative recording - Maintain labeling arranged by manufacturer
- Install qualified low energy consumption remote
boxes in multi-room STB installations - Educate subscribers about energy-saving features
and partners commitment to efficiency - Train sales staff/customer service
representatives - Share purchase/deployment data with EPA annually
19Service Provider Purchase/Fleet Requirement
Meet or exceed either a purchase or fleet
requirement for each year of partnership
- Purchase requirement 50 of new boxes purchased
in a calendar year must be qualified - Refurbishment cannot be counted
- Purchase requirement in 2011 and beyond is TBD
- Fleet requirement 10 of fleet in 2009, 25 in
2010, and TBD in 2011 and beyond must be
qualified - The following may be counted toward the fleet
requirement newly-purchased qualified boxes put
into homes, ENERGY STAR refurbished STBs put into
homes, and STBs upgraded in the field to meet
ENERGY STAR
20General Partner Commitments for Manufacturers
- Meet energy efficiency and power management
requirements and qualify products with ENERGY
STAR - Label qualified products sold at retail or
provided to Service Providers participating as
ENERGY STAR partners as well as collateral
material (and explain conditions under which
model meets ENERGY STAR) - Share unit shipment data with EPA annually
21Principles of Efficiency
- Use power more efficiently during periods of
activity - Use as little power as possible when not active
- Components/devices should drop into low power
modes as often and as deeply as possible - TEC allows most of these to be rewarded
22Technical Specification Tiers 1 2
Version 2.0 specification employs tiered
requirements to recognize top performers.
- Current Best Practices (Tier 1 Jan 2009)
- Criteria based on most efficient units currently
available - Data available Pace and Motorola IEA
presentations CEA/TIAX NRDC Reports - Savings from powering down DVRs
- Aims to encourage manufacturer participation and
service provider deployment of higher-efficiency
boxes - Next Generation Technology (Tier 2 Jan 2011)
- Savings from powering down cable and satellite
tuners - Savings from reduced on mode power use
- Aims to truly recognize top performers
23Technical Specification Approach
- Total Energy Consumption (TEC) approach
- Criteria specified in kWh/year rather than Watts
- Provides manufacturers flexibility
- Allows for additional functionality allowances
such as integrated DVRs, extra tuners - Less likely to result in perverse outcomes
- Guards against products that meet the criteria,
yet actually use more energy than those that do
not meet the criteria
24Typical Energy Consumption (TEC) Approach
Hypothetical Perverse Outcome
Sample Device
- Duty Cycle Agnostic Scenario
- On and Standby criteria are required
- Model A passes and Model B fails
Criteria (Watts) Model A Model B
On 14 12 18
Standby 10 10 4
Modal Criteria PASS FAIL
- Duty Cycle/Use Scenario
- On 5 hours/day
- Standby 19 hours/day
- TEC End Result
- Model A 91 kWh/yr
- Model B 61 kWh/yr
- Model A uses more energy than Model B!!!
TEC Criteria FAIL PASS
25Technical Requirements
26Technical Specification Requirements
- Criteria levels for both Base Functionality
(tuner) and Additional Functionalities
- Examples
- A standard definition Cable STB with no
Additional Functionalities under Tier 1 70
kWh/yr DONE. - A high definition Satellite STB with DVR under
Tier 2 Base Allowance is 56 kWh/yr NEED TO
CONSIDER ADDITIONAL ALLOWANCES.
27Technical Spec. Requirements (cont.)
- For STBs with one or more of the Additional
Functionalities, add the values for each
applicable functionality below to the Base
Functionality Allowance
28Other Technical Specification Elements
- External power supplies used with qualified STBs
must be capable of meeting ENERGY STAR levels - A multi-room allowance for STBs that can provide
independent content to more than one display
device - Credit given for auto power down if specific
conditions are met - Devices that provide for speculative recording
must have a user-accessible menu option allowing
the user to disable this feature at will.
Manufacturers must also include instructions for
disabling speculative recording in product
materials. - Three units tested at random must all fall within
specification allowance
29Test Procedure
- Based on CSA 380-06
- Modified to be used with TEC-based criteria
- IEC 62087 is in Committee Draft and incorporates
these changes - New revisions of ENERGY STAR STB will be able to
use IEC 62087 - List of Tests
- 5.3 Active Tests
- 5.3.1 Live TV (PTV)
- 5.3.2 Recording Live TV (PRecord) e.g., DVR
- 5.3.3 Playing Back Recorded TV (PPlayback) e.g.,
DVR - 5.3.4 Multiple Tuner Test
- 5.3.5 Removable Media Playback Test (PPlayback)
e.g., DVD - 5.3.6 Removable Media Record Test (PRecord)
e.g., DVD - 5.4 Inactive Tests
- 5.4.1 Standby Test (PStandby)
- 5.4.2 Auto Power Down (P AutoPD)
30Test Procedure (continued)
- To compare to the allowance, apply the average
power values obtained from the test procedure to
one of the following - If the STB includes a DVR or DVD player/recorder,
one additional step is needed
31Test Procedure (continued)
- For On-Playback and On-Record, use the following
equation to calculate energy usage employing the
corresponding duty cycles from the table
32Test Procedure (continued)
- Lastly, calculate the total device usage by
adding the results for Playback and Record (if
applicable) to the kWhBase - If the calculated usage value is less than the
calculated allowance value, a STB can qualify for
ENERGY STAR
33Avenues for Savings
- Energy savings opportunities in
- Hardware improvements (die shrink, ASICs, better
design) - Design improvements (shutting down sub systems
when not in use) - Network improvements (improving network protocols
to use less energy when underutilized, scale
power consumption, and use less generally) - To achieve these savings, everyone needs to be
involved - OEMs
- CableLabs
- Service Providers
- Utilities
34Energy Savings in the Network
- The network on both sides of the box continues to
be the limiting factor - DOCSIS
- Conditional Access/Cable Card
- MOCA
- Ethernet
- To achieve energy savings in the network,
everyone needs to be involved going forward - OEMs
- CableLabs
- Service providers
- Utilities
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36Program Success to DateCurrent ENERGY STAR
Partners
Service Providers
ATT
DIRECTV
ECOCYN Energy
EPB
37Program Success to DateCurrent ENERGY STAR
Partners
Manufacturers Number of Qualified Products
Cisco Systems 3
DIRECTV 12
General Instrument Corporation (Motorola) 7
Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. 1
Pace plc 1
38Program Success
- Manufacturers are reporting they are changing
their designs as a result of ENERGY STARs
specification - Manufacturers are reporting that ENERGY STAR
compliancy is being specd by a broad spectrum of
service providers - If all STBs sold in the US met ENERGY STAR, the
savings in energy costs will grow to about 2
billion each year and greenhouse gas emissions
will be reduced by the equivalent of greenhouse
gas emissions from about 2.5 million vehicles
39ENERGY STAR Set-top Box Contacts
- Katharine Kaplan, EPA
- kaplan.katharine_at_epa.gov
- 202.343.9120
- Tom Bolioli, Terranovum, LLC
- tbolioli_at_terranovum.com
- 781.334.4074