Video: What do the new motor efficiency requirements mean to the end user?

At the 2010 International Manufacturing Technology Show in Chicago, Baldor Electric talks with Group Publisher Jim Langhenry about the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 and what the new motor efficiency requirements mean to the end user.

September 22, 2010

At the 2010 IMTS show at McCormick Place Convention Center in Chicago, CFE Media Group Publisher/Co-Founder Jim Langhenry interviews Product Manager George Weihrauch with Baldor Electric to discuss the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007. The Energy Independence and Security Act (“EISA”), which was signed into law in 2007, becomes effective on December 19, 2010. This law expands the mandated energy efficiency standards from the Energy Policy Act of 1992 (EPAct) for a wider range industrial motors which are manufactured for sale in the United States.

For more information about the motor efficiency upgrades and how the EISA Bill will affect the end-user, read the following items:

  • EISA Bill Overview
  • Complete EISA Bill
  • NEMA Premium efficiency motor rebate program in U.S. energy bill
  • HE motors: Prepare for high-efficiency mandates
  • European motor efficiency developments
  • Engineers: Restart your motor specifications
  • Think Again, April 2010: Efficiency, applied
  • Motor efficiency requirements come December 2010. Are you ready?