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Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
University of California

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Power levels in office equipment: Measurements of new monitors and personal computers
Judy A. Roberson
Richard E. Brown
Bruce Nordman
Carrie A. Webber
Gregory H. Homan
Akshay Mahajan
Marla McWhinney
Jonathan G. Koomey

Download the Paper (264 K, PDF file) - May 14, 2002 Tell a colleague about it.
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ABSTRACT:

Electronic office equipment has proliferated rapidly over the last twenty years and is projected to continue growing in the future. Efforts to reduce the growth in office equipment energy use have focused on power management to reduce power consumption of electronic devices when not being used for their primary purpose. The EPA ENERGY STAR[registered trademark] program has been instrumental in gaining widespread support for power management in office equipment, and accurate information about the energy used by office equipment in all power levels is important to improving program design and evaluation. This paper presents the results of a field study conducted during 2001 to measure the power levels of new monitors and personal computers. We measured off, on, and low-power levels in about 60 units manufactured since July 2000. The paper summarizes power data collected, explores differences within the sample (e.g., between CRT and LCD monitors), and discusses some issues that arise in metering office equipment. We also present conclusions to help improve the success of future power management programs.Our findings include a trend among monitor manufacturers to provide a single very low low-power level, and the need to standardize methods for measuring monitor on power, to more accurately estimate the annual energy consumption of office equipment, as well as actual and potential energy savings from power management.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Judy A. Roberson, Richard E. Brown, Bruce Nordman, Carrie A. Webber, Gregory H. Homan, Akshay Mahajan, Marla McWhinney, and Jonathan G. Koomey, "Power levels in office equipment: Measurements of new monitors and personal computers" (May 14, 2002). Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Paper LBNL-50508.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/lbnl/LBNL-50508

 
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