According to the regulation, there will be a maximum allowed power consumption in standby mode of no more than one watt in computers, washing machines, TVs, and other office and household devices as of the year 2010. If the devices have a display, the maximum may be increased to two watts. The admissible levels will be halved three years later. Holzmann commented that ”a longstanding goal of Germany’s environmental policy, namely achieving a one-watt level of consumption in standby mode, will thus be achieved and even undercut at a later date”.
Standby losses in Germany’s private households and offices account for electricity consumption of at least 22 billion kWh per year, incurring annual costs of at least four billion euros. The new EU regulations would result in a reduction in Germany’s power consumption of more than six billion kWh per year—roughly four million tonnes of CO2. The output of a large power plant with an 800-megawatt capacity could be saved, and consumers would also save about 1.2 billion euros in yearly electricity costs.
Whereas the directive only regulates a certain segment of standby losses, there is further potential for savings in computer networks (so-called network standby) as well as in ”0 watt off-mode” levels of consumption. Germany and environmental and consumer associations have called upon Brussels to determine that future devices marketed in Europe must be able to be switched off completely. After this objective has been achieved by including it in the preliminary remarks of the directive, the technical feasibility and appropriateness of a 0 watt/hard-off switch requirement should be considered on a product-by-product basis. The UBA has calculated that standby power losses throughout Europe could be reduced by an additional 7 billion kWh, or about 1 billion kWh in Germany.
This directive is the first measure under the Ecodesign of Energy-Using Products Directive (Ecodesign Directive). Other measures for other product groups are scheduled and will follow in the coming months.
Standby losses in offices and households/Savings potential (EU, Germany) Source: Federal Environment Agency, Press Release Nr. 54/2008 |
| EU | Germany |
Standby losses in offices and households, total (2004) | No information | 22 billion kWh |
Standby losses affected by the ordinance, 2020, in ‘business-as-usual’ scenario | 49 billion kWh | Roughly 9 billion kWh |
Savings potential (in 2020) | 35 billion kWh | Over 6 billion kWh |
CO2 saved | 14 million tonnes | Roughly 4 million tonnes |