Energy Star program

Energy Star

Understanding Energy Star Guidelines

Understanding Energy Star Guidelines

Understanding what the Energy Star label means and how the program works helps you chose appliances that stand up to rigorous use and cut energy consumption. The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) started the program in the 1990s, and it makes it easy to make product choices based on performance and efficiency.The DOE requires EnergyGuide labels on some major appliances like HVAC systems, water heaters, washing machines, refrigerators and dishwashers because they have engineering differences that can improve their efficiency. Those labels tell you how much energy the appliance uses over the course of a year along with its cost based on average use and energy prices.

The products that exceed the standards for energy efficiency in each appliance group receive the Energy Star’s distinctive label found on the EnergyGuide label or the product itself. The DOE’s guidelines for the Energy Star include:

  • The product must demonstrate it performs well under a wide variety of operating conditions.

  • Consumers need to recoup the extra costs that high efficiency products carry over a reasonable time period.

  • The energy consumption of a product can be accurately measured and verified.

  • Labeling the product would help consumers differentiate that product from other less efficient models.

Besides major home appliances, you’ll find the Energy Star label on computers and peripherals, light bulbs and televisions. While every bit of energy saved is important, it’s especially important to look for the label on major appliances, especially heating and cooling equipment, because they use the bulk of energy consumed in homes.

The DOE also uses the product’s durability and versatility under varying conditions to award it the designation, another good reason to look for the label on major home appliances. Better quality often translates to increased dependability and a longer lifetime for high-ticket appliances, and those characteristics also save money over the long term.

HVAC systems that earn the Energy Star label pay for themselves in lower operating costs and many have features that enhance comfort. To learn more, contact Air Assurance, providing top-notch HVAC services for Broken Arrow homeowners.

Our goal is to help educate our customers in the Tulsa and Broken Arrow, Oklahoma area about energy and home comfort issues (specific to HVAC systems). For more information about Energy Star guidelines and other HVAC topics, call us at 918-217-8273. Credit/Copyright Attribution: “PublicDomain/Wikipedia”

Geothermal, Heat Pumps

Get a Federal Tax Credit for Installing a Geothermal Heat Pump

A geothermal heat pump is the most energy efficient and durable system you can use in your home and a federal tax credit exists to help you offset the higher cost of these systems. A heat pump cools and heats by moving heat from one place to another. While air-source heat pumps depend on outdoor temperatures to harvest or deposit heat, a geothermal system executes this process by using underground resources.

Get a Federal Tax Credit for Installing a Geothermal Heat Pump

Since temperatures vary little underground throughout the year, the geothermal system is more efficient at both heating and cooling. They use a loop field that's buried deeply underground as the resource for depositing heat in the summer and the resource in the winter. It's the loop field that adds the extra cost to a geothermal heat pump, and the tax credits will help offset this expense.

Homeowners who install a qualifying system can deduct its entire cost, with some exceptions, to receive a 30 percent credit on federal taxes. This credit applies to primary and secondary homes, but not rental properties. It even applies to new home construction. The program is so generous because geothermal systems have a low carbon footprint. The loop field can last 50 years or more, and the heat pump itself may last 25 years.

The federal tax credit won't cover the cost of the ductwork or a backup heating coil, but it will cover the cost of the desuperheater, an upgrade that takes the heat from your home and uses it to heat your water.

A geothermal system must meet the requirements for the Energy Star program to qualify and it must be installed on or before December 31, 2016. You can deduct the entire cost of the system, except for the ductwork and heating coil, to receive the credit. There's no cap on the amount you can deduct for the loop field and the remaining heat pump and desuperheater if you opt for this upgrade.

If you'd like more information about a geothermal heat pump and the federal tax credit, contact Air Assurance, serving Broken Arrow homeowners with HVAC services since 1985.

Our goal is to help educate our customers in the Tulsa and Broken Arrow, Oklahoma area about energy and home comfort issues (specific to HVAC systems). 

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