Report: ‘Energy Star’ vulnerable to abuse
Associated Press
WASHINGTON
Fifteen phony products — including a gasoline- powered alarm clock — won a label from the government certifying them as energy-efficient in a test of the federal “Energy Star” program.
Investigators concluded the program is “vulnerable to fraud and abuse.”
A report released Friday said government investigators tried to pass off 20 fake products as energy-efficient, and only two were rejected. Three others didn’t get a response.
The program run by the Energy Department and Environmental Protection Agency is supposed to identify energy-efficient products to help consumers. Tax credits and rebates serve as incentives to buy Energy Star products.
But the General Accountability Office, Congress’ investigative arm, said Energy Star doesn’t verify claims made by manufacturers — which might explain the gasoline-powered alarm clock, not to mention a product billed as an air room cleaner that was actually a space heater with a feather duster and fly strips attached, and a computer monitor that won approval within 30 minutes of submission.
The alarm clock’s size — 11‚Ñ2-feet high and 15 inches wide — and model name “Black Gold” should have raised alarms with Energy Star, but the automated review system didn’t catch on to the deception.
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