Comment Why Regulations are worse than Competition or Tax (Score 1) 303
Regulations are worse than both Free Market or Tax
http://ceolas.net/#li23x
http://freedomlightbulb.org/ "How bans are wrongly justified" 14 points, referenced (light bulb example, but similarly here)
In summary
1. Energy saving is not the only reason to choose a product, whether video cards, light bulbs (as mentioned in the comments) or anything else
2. Energy saving mandates change product characteristics eg performance, usability, size/weight/appearance as well as price
- or noone would want the products and a ban would not be "needed"
There is no "free lunch".
3. The bans are about saving electricity
Video Cards or light bulbs don't burn coal or release CO2 gas
If there is a problem - Deal with the problem.
4. Normally, mandating resource savings is based on resource shortage.
There is no future low emission and renewable electricity shortage
5. The electricity savings involved are marginal for maany reasons, as linked.
Far more relevant to deal with electricity generation and distribution (eg grid upgrades, smart grids etc)
and alternative consumption savings eg heating/cooling, or unnecessary product use
- than banning the personal choice of products.
6. The product bans are not for usual reason of being unsafe to use - eg like lead paint
The ban is simply to save electricity.
Clearly, electricity or its source eg coal could simply have price increases in that case
- letting people decide for themselves how they wish to use it.
7. Alternatively, the Video Cards could be taxed.
Some comments here imply the "tax would have to be big, and unpopular"
Firstly, being allowed is still better than bans.
Secondly, a tax could be used to lower the price of alternatives ie smaller tax is needed to even up the market,
in fact even a small tax increase likely changes consumption (and people "not just hit by taxes" in having cheaper alternatives)
Government can also gain direct income for other society purposes - unlike with bans.
8. Increase - not decrease- of competition is best of all:
Free market solutions are therefore best - also to save energy
Competition keeps down energy cost among electricity providers and product manufacturers themselves
Rather than ban some Video Cards, the EU could help new alternatives to market (including energy saving ones)
- and they in turn could use energy saving as a prominent advertising feature.
After all - supposedly we have "stupid consumers" who buy the "wrong" products, or a ban would not be "needed".
Given that energy saving is a product and consumer advantage,
then better consumer information (eg "energy star" effortds, product labelling, public campaigns)
along with appropriate "Expensive to buy but cheap in the long run" commercials, ads in Video/computer magazines etc
(think of Energizer battery, washing up liquid commercials) is the way to go.
Politicians - often heavily lobbied by manufacturers looking for profits on new patented Green Technology -
love simple visible media-friendly report solutions that in reality mean nothing.
It is a pity that so many here in the comments fall for the same trick.