The Department of Energy was asleep at the wheel, but now tough new national appliance standards for 26 common household and business products during President Obama’s term could slash total U.S. electricity use by over 1,900 terawatt hours (1.9 trillion kilowatt hours) by 2030. The savings to the consumers and businesses: Over $123 billion. This was the findings of a report released by the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE) and the Appliance Standards Awareness Project (ASAP). It figures the standards will make a huge contribution to our efforts to cut global warming pollution by eliminating 158 million tons per year by 2030, roughly the amount emitted by 63 large conventional coal-fired power plants. It’s a win-win situation when the feds are commit to working with makers of water heaters, home furnaces and refrigerators to cut emissions and return money to the American taxpayer. In the report, called Ka-BOOM , U.S. electricity use in 2,000 saw a 2.5% reduction due to existing standards, before all the power players were on board. By 2010, the savings will grow to a projected 7% reduction and a 12% reduction by 2030. The authors say even greater gains could have been met had the DOE met the legal deadlines for updated standards that passed without any action between 1994 and 2004. Here are some of the numbers highlighted by Grist : Over 1,900 terawatt-hours saved by 2030, or roughly

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Updated Fed Appliance Standards Save Billions While Cutting Energy