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You can thank Arthur Rosenfeld for energy savings

Godfather of efficiency retires from California Energy Commission

Note:  If readers want to thank Art for his lifetime of work — he gave up an almost certain Nobel prize in physics to pursue energy efficiency — put them in the comments and I’ll make sure he sees them.

When octogenarian Arthur H. Rosenfeld vacates his utilitarian office at the California Energy Commission this week, one of his final tasks might seem of little consequence: He’ll turn off the lights.

But that simple act — some would say compulsion — has transformed California into a world leader in energy efficiency.

Arthur Rosenfeld

My friend and former DOE colleague, Art Rosenfeld is finally retiring as a California Energy Commissioner at the age of 83.  I discussed a little of what Art  has achieved here — “Energy efficiency, Part 4: How does California do it so consistently and cost-effectively?“  If you want to see a full discussion of what this great man has done for the nation, including the video of the funniest talk I’ve ever given, click here for an-all day symposium on his 80th birthday, with talks by Steven Chu and John Holdren.

I hope to get some guest posts from him on his passion cool roofs — see a paper of his at Geoengineering, adaptation and mitigation, Part 2: White roofs are the trillion-dollar solution.  But while he’s settling into his new part-time role at the Lawrence Berkeley Lab Center for Building Science he helped found, I’ll excerpt this piece in today’s LA Times, “You can thank Arthur Rosenfeld for energy savings“:

California homes are loaded with personal computers, widescreen TVs, iPods, PlayStations, air conditioners, massive refrigerators, hot tubs and swimming pool pumps. Despite that, Golden State residents today use about the same amount of electricity per capita that they did 30 years ago.

For that, they can largely thank Rosenfeld, a slight, bespectacled nuclear physicist fueled by a passion to wring the most out of every kilowatt. Polite and affable, with a knack for making science understandable to people who couldn’t screw in a lightbulb, Rosenfeld, starting in the 1970s, provided California energy regulators the data they needed to enact some of the toughest efficiency standards in the world.

New homes and buildings were required to be better insulated and fitted with energy-wise lighting, heating and cooling systems. Appliances had to be designed to use less power. Utilities were forced to motivate their customers to use less electricity.

The principle, Rosenfeld said, was simple: Conserving energy is cheaper and smarter than building power plants.

Not surprisingly, those rules were attacked by business groups as bureaucratic job killers. Rosenfeld, who received his doctorate from the University of Chicago, was called unqualified by critics at Pacific Gas & Electric Co., one of California’s largest utilities.

Yet these mandates have yielded about $30 billion annually in energy savings for California consumers. They’ve eliminated air pollution that’s the equivalent of taking 100 million cars off the roads. They have been copied by states and countries worldwide. California’s gains are so closely linked to Rosenfeld that they’ve been dubbed the Rosenfeld Effect in energy efficiency circles, where the 83-year-old has taken on rock star status.

… Rosenfeld is seen as an example of how dogged persistence at the local level can turn the impossible into the achievable.

“He shows cheerfulness at a time when everyone is warning that the sky is falling by saying that we can do this if we just put our minds to work,” said V. John White, executive director of the Center for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Technologies in Sacramento. “He’s influenced . . . utilities and policy managers around the world. . . . He’s lived to see his ideas go from the fanciful to the mainstream. He’s a prophet in his own time.”

All the praise is a little embarrassing for the self-effacing Rosenfeld, whose penchant for conservation came early. Born in 1926 in Birmingham, Ala., he spent his early years in New Orleans as the Great Depression gripped the nation. His father was an expert in sugar cane cultivation, a vocation that took the family to Egypt when Rosenfeld was 6 years old.

It was there that the child learned that resources weren’t infinite. His parents, budget-minded Southerners, drove tiny cars to save on gas andinsisted he turn off lights when leaving a room. These were familiar practices to the European children who attended his Western-style school.

“Electricity wasn’t dirt cheap in Europe and certainly not in Egypt,” Rosenfeld said. “Europeans only used half as much energy per dollar of GDP [gross domestic product], and it was clear that their lifestyle was as good as ours.”

Rosenfeld returned to the United States to get his bachelor’s degree in industrial physics at Virginia Polytechnic Institute. He taught radar operators at Navy Pier in Chicago during World War II, then went on to study particle physics at the University of Chicago under the legendary Enrico Fermi, who built the world’s first nuclear reactor under the university’s football stadium.

In 1954, Rosenfeld took a position at UC Berkeley at what was to become the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, joining Luis Alvarez in the development of hydrogen bubble chambers for detecting subatomic particles. “Fermi wrote me a wonderful recommendation as his ‘second-most promising graduate student,’ ” Rosenfeld said. He recalled that Fermi, who would die soon after, “coyly declined to identify his first.”

Fifteen years later, Alvarez, backed by a team of scientists that included Rosenfeld, won the Nobel Prize for physics. But climbing to the heights of quantum physics research was not to be Rosenfeld’s destiny.

Destiny is a strong word.  Art chose to give up an almost sure Nobel prize to help humanity in a more tangible fashion.  That’s the kind of unique man he is.

The turning point came on a cool Friday night in November 1973 during the second Arab oil embargo. Television screens beamed images of frustrated Americans in gigantic cars queuing up for fuel. Pained to see his nation humbled by its spendthrift habits, Rosenfeld looked around his own building. Most of his colleagues had departed hours before, not bothering to turn off the lights. Rosenfeld went from office to office flipping switches. His life’s mission suddenly clicked. “The cheapest energy is what you don’t use” became Rosenfeld’s guiding mantra from that night on. “It would be more profitable to attack our own wasteful energy use than to attack OPEC.”

He set out on a mission to engineer U.S. appliances and buildings to use less energy. It wouldn’t be easy. Pressure was mounting to build massive nuclear facilities to meet California’s growing needs. Manufacturers and builders would undoubtedly balk at tough efficiency standards. The key, Rosenfeld concluded, lay in government policy that could force these changes.

So he and his colleagues at the Lawrence Berkeley lab produced meticulous research showing that conservation was the bedrock of true energy security. Patient, persistent and armed with reams of data and unshakable confidence in his findings, the scientist made believers of officials including Jerry Brown, then-governor of California.

“He gave validation to the very unorthodox notion that economic growth could be decoupled from energy growth,” said Brown, now California’s attorney general. “He was really the guru of efficiency.”

Under Brown, California set up its first Energy Commission and passed its first-ever efficiency standards for buildings and household appliances.

Appliance makers claimed they’d be forced to offer stripped-down models that customers wouldn’t buy. Then they quickly set about innovating. California is one of the world’s most lucrative consumer markets, and manufacturers weren’t about to get left off the shelves. Today’s refrigerators use a quarter of the electricity of their 1970s ancestors but are bigger and equipped with more doo-dads than ever. Consumers have saved billions on energy costs and the federal government has copied California’s standards.

Rosenfeld was appointed to the Energy Commission by Gov. Gray Davis in 2000 and reappointed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger in 2005. In his last key vote as an energy commissioner, he applied that same conservative thinking to energy-guzzling big-screen televisions, which currently account for about one-tenth of residential power consumption in California.

New efficiency mandates go into effect Jan. 1, 2011, and become more stringent two years later. They’re expected to save Californians $8 billion in energy costs over a decade. Some TV makers weren’t happy. Rosenfeld wasn’t surprised.

“The first time we put standards on a product, we tend to get objections that this will be the ruin of civilization as we know it,” he mused. “But then people get used to it.”

Rosenfeld’s work has helped keep California’s per-capita electric power consumption flat for the last three decades, while the rest of the country’s jumped 40%….

The Economist magazine flew Rosenfeld to London in 2008 to present him with its innovation prize. The administration of President Bush in 2006 gave Rosenfeld the prestigious Enrico Fermi Award for scientific achievement. Utilities, including PG&E, are now close allies. Even the Consumer Electronics Assn., which fought Rosenfeld and the Energy Commission on the flat-screen television mandates, said “there is no doubt that Art leaves a lasting legacy in California and the nation.”

Rosenfeld acknowledges he’s slowing down just a bit. His wife, Roz, died last year; the couple had been married 53 years. He’s looking forward to spending more time with his two daughters and six grandchildren and puttering around his Berkeley home, an 80-year-old Spanish-style place that boasts double-glazed windows, high-efficiency appliances and energy-sipping lightbulbs.

Although he no longer drives, Rosenfeld plans to work a few days a week at the Lawrence Berkeley Lab to help drive advances in the use of light-colored roofs on homes and commercial buildings. The technique could save $2 billion annually in heating and air conditioning costs, he said.

“It keeps the city cooler, the Earth cooler and it saves energy,” Rosenfeld said, noting that roofs account for about a quarter of all surfaces in urban areas.

The strategy is vintage Rosenfeld: Simple. Effective. Achievable. Now.

Now is the time to thank Art for his lifetime of devotion on the first fuel, energy efficiency.

Related Post:

21 Responses to You can thank Arthur Rosenfeld for energy savings

  1. Robert S. says:

    Thank you so much for your lifetime of work promoting energy efficiency, Mr. Rosenfeld. You are an inspiration to us all.

  2. ken levenson says:

    Thank you for all your visionary work Mr. Rosenfeld. Ironically perhaps, your impact seems beyond calculation. May you have many great, low energy, adventures in the years ahead!

    I can only think, wow – what a nice way to start the week.

  3. Appreciative says:

    Dr. Rosenfeld- Thank you for your life’s work. You leave a legacy that benefits humanity.

  4. Leif says:

    Dr. Rosenfeld: There are so many unrecognized climate heros out there and you deserve a seat at the head of the table.

    Two Palms Up,

    Leif

  5. Jo says:

    If an individual or organisation saves energy via efficiency it means they will be paying less for their energy. If this cost saving is just spent on other goods or services has energy really been conserved or just used in another manner?

    [JR: Conserved. Embodied energy in whatever they buy is about 1/10 of what they saved.]

  6. Dave Morris says:

    Dr. Rosenfeld,
    I’ll echo the sincere thanks offered by others, and add my appreciation for the public (and political) education component of your work. That has been crucial to the successes we have had in raising energy efficiency. Thanks for laying the foundations for the coming era of efficiency.
    Dave Morris

  7. Jeff Huggins says:

    Dear Art,

    Thank you so much for all that you’ve done. We obviously need more people with the concern, intelligence, creativity, and persistence that you’ve demonstrated for so long.

    I was born in California (in Berkeley, in fact) and have lived in California most of my life. Although I appreciate being able to “count on” the availability of electricity — and thank you very much for helping us save so much — I’ve always found it interesting and nice that some of the best evenings I’ve had, here, have been those rare evenings when the electricity went out. Those nights help remind us of the wonders of conversation, walking outside, candlelight, silence, the stars, and going to bed at a nice time. No TVs blaring and etc. etc. etc.

    I also think this comment of yours is a gem and should be noted here at CP and elsewhere:

    “The first time we put standards on a product, we tend to get objections that this will be the ruin of civilization as we know it,” he mused. “But then people get used to it.”

    Yes! I have a background in business — Harvard and McKinsey and etc. — and it amazes me how many times businesses make the claim, at least publicly, that “if they pass that regulation, the world will end for us all”. Then, when the same regulation passes (if it does), in the next staff meeting, the CEO says something like, “oh well, now let’s make it work, gang”, and everyone gets to the task of making it work. The world doesn’t come crashing down, and in most cases, the company doesn’t either. What was once claimed to be a threat to civilization and to the American Dream, the next day is just another matter of life to be respected, dealt with, and achieved. Consumers benefit. The planet benefits. The ideal of sustainability benefits (although it is still losing the battle, so there’s much more work to do).

    How many times do we have to learn about this same cycle? It’s actually funny in some ways, if it didn’t often have the tragic consequence that some very good improvements are often not passed, because of all of the “the world will crash” stuff.

    In any case, congrats and thanks for your great work.

    Be Well,

    Jeff Huggins
    Los Gatos, CA

  8. Daniel J. Andrews says:

    I hadn’t known about Dr. Rosenfeld. What a vast change he’s made, and his story is inspiring. Thank you, Dr. Rosenfeld! I don’t suppose you have time to write a book on your experiences? I noticed there are several Arthur Rosenfelds who have written books so this must be a sign that it is your turn now. :-)

  9. Sidharth says:

    Thanks a heap Dr. Rosenfeld but I hope you have not retired from the journey of doing all that good that you have been doing…

    Hats-off to you for your tremendous of you. I have become a Die Hard fan of yours. Kindly keep spreading these positive vibes across the world and make this Planet Earth a safe place to live at.

    A Planet Lover,
    -Sidharth
    @www.TheWarmist.com

  10. Art’s contribution to America’s energy future has been immeasurable. Hats off to an outstanding public servant and one of the true giants in the field, with a legacy that should inspire us all.

    Regards and best wishes,
    Tom

  11. Art Rosenfeld has been my hero since i began working on energy issues in 1975. Art combines brilliance and personal charm, vision and technical detail, and is incredibly results-driven and one of the most fascinating conversationalists I have ever known. Art has inspired me to dedicate my life to promoting his common sense, but far-reaching vision, as he has hundreds, if not thousands, of other professionals. It has been my great honor to count him a friend, mentor and inspirational leader. In these current times of polarized politics, mean-spirited diatribes, and toxic talking heads, Art has always brought the sage and spherically sensible perspective that brings together people with strongly held diverse positions to actually get things done, and done right. Thank God for Dr. Arthur Rosenfeld!!!!!

  12. Ken Colburn says:

    Simple. Effective. Achievable. Now.

    Would that Congress would take that as its energy mantra with the common sense, integrity, and sincerity that Art Rosenfeld has. We’re all beneficiaries of his work. Thank you, Dr. Rosenfeld.

  13. Mark Shapiro says:

    Dear Dr. Rosenfeld,

    My efficient lights are turned off, my efficient refrigerator just stopped humming, and low electric bills comfort my family.

    Thank you, Dr. Rosenfeld.

    One of your many beneficiaries,
    Mark Shapiro

  14. john atcheson says:

    Art:

    One of the truly rewarding and fun parts of my career was being in the office down the hall from you. Not only are you one of the most prescient thinkers of out time, but you are a wonderful man.

    Einstein once said, “Try not to become a man of success, but rather become a man of value.” You are both. Your legacy is large and hugely significant, but to me you are first a man of warmth and grace I was fortunate to share some time with, and second, one of the finest and most important thinkers of out time.

    John

  15. espiritwater says:

    It doesn’t work! (The videos)

  16. Ted K says:

    Hey Dr. Rosenfeld,
    I don’t know much about energy conservation, but I find your story very inspiring. Sometimes we read stories of crime and the negative aspects of society. The garbage shows on TV which cater to the baser instincts and the lowest common denominator of people. We often forget the quiet heroes like you striving each and every day to make their fellow man’s life easier and better. THANKS FOR BEING THE QUIET HERO!!!!!!! We appreciate it even though some of us never told you.

  17. Dan B says:

    Dr. Rosenfeld;

    Do you have a vision for humanity?

    If what you’ve accomplished so far is any indication you do.

    Will you be like Al Gore, losing the election and going on to another calling?

    Will you be like Mahatma Gandhi and transform the world in a few years?

    Dan

  18. Eve says:

    Thank you, Dr. Rosenfeld – you give me hope for the future.
    I hope to hear more about “white roofs” Is this something
    that could be done on ost buildings?

    Eve

  19. Kal says:

    Good job. We need all the help we can get, and you have helped quite a lot.

    Kal

  20. Brian says:

    Thank you Dr Rosenfeld

  21. BT says:

    Dr Rosenfeld, how does the energy production of new proposed solar and wind plants in the desert compare to the amount of energy that can be saved via increases in household, business and government office efficiences, or to local (e.g., rooftop) production of alternative energies?

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