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Trump Administration to revamp appliance efficiency standards

The Trump administration announced on Friday that it would delay the implementation of energy and water efficiency standards for appliances such as central air conditioners and washing machines.

The Department of Energy has announced that it will delay seven appliance efficiency standards set by former president Joe Biden. The Environmental Protection Agency announced that it will overhaul its "water-sense" efficiency standards labels for toilets and shower heads.

Both agencies' heads said that the move would lower prices for consumers.

Chris Wright, Energy Secretary said: "Today's news will encourage consumer choice and lower costs - this is a win all Americans."

EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin has said that he instructed the agency's WaterSense program to overhaul certification standards for products such as showerheads so that they are 20% more efficient than regular products, and that certified homes are 30% more efficient.

Zeldin claimed that the Biden-Harris Administration "weaponized' energy efficiency regulations to restrict consumer choices and that faucets in the bathroom, kitchen, and residential toilets as well as sprinkler nozzles which met WaterSense requirements, "just don't function very well."

Trump took action on Tuesday to return to the older standards in light bulbs, toilets, showers, and other water-using devices, just a day after he signed an order to promote plastic straws and to rescind a plan to cut down single-use plastics. (Reporting and editing by David Gregorio; Additional reporting by Ryan Patrick Jones, Ismail Shakil and Valerie Volcovici)

(source: Reuters)