Air conditioning manufacturers and trade associations negotiating over energy efficient standards reached an agreement for proposal to Congress and the Department of Energy. The current federal standard was established by Congress in 1992 and calls for the most common type of equipment to have an Energy Efficiency Ratio (EER) of 8.9. Under the agreement, the standard for the most common units will rise to 11.2 EER in 2010, a 26% improvement in efficiency. The agreement would also extend to large package commercial air conditioners and heat pumps (up to 760,000 Btu/h cooling capacity).
It was negotiated over the past eight months by manufacturers represented by the Air-Conditioning and Refrigeration Institute (ARI), and by energy efficiency supporters represented by the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE), a nonprofit organization.