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New Efficiency Ratings (SEER2) – Getting it Wrong

Bottom Line: The US Department of Energy (DOE) has new efficiency standards (SEER2, EER2, HSPF2), effective January 1, 2023. Unfortunately, these new standards mislead the public because they undervalue how critical you are as the HVAC professional, and why quality installation matters, as always.

Background:
Basically, DOE decided to change the test procedures to more accurately reflect how equipment is installed. This is boring, feel free to skip ahead to “What Changed.”

The Energy Policy and Conservation Act of 1975 (“EPCA” or “the Act”), sets forth a variety of provisions designed to improve energy efficiency and established the Energy Conservation Program for Consumer Products Other Than Automobiles. These products include central air conditioners and central air conditioning heat pumps. Section 310 of EISA 2007 established that the Department’s test procedures for all covered products must account for standby mode and off mode energy consumption. (42 U.S.C. 6295(gg)(2)(A)) For CAC/HP, standby mode is incorporated into the SEER and HSPF metrics, while off mode power consumption is separately regulated. This final rule includes changes relevant to the determination of both SEER and HSPF (including standby mode) and off mode power consumption.

PS. I tried to find an image of the new Energy Guide, but no luck.

What Changed:
The details to the efficiency calculation’s changes can be found here.  And, if you’re into differential equations… you’re going to love this.

Here is a brief summary of a few key elements:

Why It Matters:
Primarily it matters to equipment manufacturers and energy nerds like me (us?).

What To Tell Your Customers:
Nothing about SEER2, EER2, and HSPF2.  In terms of high-efficiency equipment, yes of course you speak to its value, but the new efficiency ratings, nope. Unless you enjoy watching people’s eyes glaze over or seeing them fade away as they lose interest in your conversation. In my opinion, this will be as important to them as when the EPA changed the fuel efficiency calculations for miles per gallon (MPG) calculations.  They did.  Twice, since 2008.  See?

Please tell your customers that YOUR team matters. High-efficiency boxes (aka, equipment) will underperform, underdeliver, and could have a shorter life cycle when incorrectly installed. It could also result in moisture problems affecting their health and property. That is why YOU matter!
Well, you matter if you design and install the equipment correctly.  You must ensure the equipment size meets the load (Manuals J® and S®), the ducts are sized for good airflow (Manual D®), and the equipment is installed correctly (QI 5 Standard). Otherwise, the high-priced high-efficiency equipment is just that: expensive. Your customer’s home needs quality installation so they will be comfortable, have lower utility costs, and enjoy a lengthy life cycle.

Need a simple way to demonstrate you installed the system correctly?  You need a Quality Installation Certificate!

Conclusion:
Your customers may notice the funny new efficiency ratings (“What’s that two mean?”). Most won’t. If anyone asks, you can explain there is a new test procedure. But the thing that matters most is that the equipment is installed properly. An HVAC system is not like a refrigerator (plug it in and it works). It must be installed correctly as a complete system, and that is why you should be hired to install it!

I think it’s great that the new efficiency ratings more accurately portray the equipment’s energy usage. But emphasize that the system must be designed, and the equipment MUST be installed correctly!

Oh, and they need to hire you to do that.

Book Report:
I forgot to give you my list last month, so I’m rolling it in here.

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