The administration announced a comprehensive overhaul of federal appliance efficiency regulations, aiming to eliminate mandates that it characterizes as restrictive.
The Department of Energy will propose a rewrite of how energy‑efficiency standards are established, creating a permanent safeguard against future regulations on gas stoves, fluorescent lighting, HVAC systems and other household appliances.
Department of Energy Secretary Chris Wright stated that consumers should be able to choose between appliances that meet their performance expectations without government‑imposed limitations.
The proposal argues that previous standards increased costs and reduced functionality, limiting consumer choice across a range of products.
It cites past interpretations of the Energy Policy and Conservation Act that led to progressively stricter efficiency requirements, which the administration contends made certain appliances more expensive or less effective.
Recent adjustments in 2021 and 2024 had softened earlier rules by making procedural requirements non‑binding and removing a significant energy‑savings threshold.
The draft rule will be open for public comment for 30 days before it can be finalized as an official regulation.
The initiative is introduced as a heat wave grips both the United States and Europe, intensifying public focus on energy use and appliance performance.
A European official highlighted that only about 20 % of U.S. households have air‑conditioning compared with roughly 88 % in Europe, linking the United States’ emissions to broader climate impacts.
Officials describe the rewrite as a commonsense effort to preserve consumer choice and keep appliance prices affordable.