Supporting Statement for
Form EIA-63A, “Annual Solar Thermal Collector Manufacturers Survey,”
Form EIA-63B, “Annual Photovoltaic Module/Cell Manufacturers Survey,” and
Form EIA-902, “Annual Geothermal Heat Pump Manufacturers Survey”
OMB Number 1905-0196
Introduction
The Energy Information Administration (EIA) requests approval for a three‑year extension with revisions to Forms EIA‑63A, "Annual Solar Thermal Collector, EIA-63B, “Photovoltaic Module/Cell Manufacturers Surveys," and Form EIA-902, “Annual Geothermal Heat Pump Manufacturers Survey.”
Forms EIA-63A and EIA-63B are currently covered under OMB number 1905-0196. Form EIA-902 is currently covered under OMB number 1905-0204. The OMB number 1905-0204 will be discontinued because form EIA-902 will be added to the OMB number 1905-0196, and, therefore, all EIA renewable forms will be under one OMB number.
For Form EIA-63A, EIA proposes the following new elements: Item 3.1.a Collector manufacturing information and Item 4.3 Average Thermal Performance Rating of Collector. Other changes to the EIA-63A include: 1) Item 4.4 Collecting domestic shipments by sector instead of total shipments by sector, 2) Item 4.4.1 through Item 4.4.5 Changing the sector headings from Residential, Commercial, Industrial, Utility, and Other to Residential, Commercial, Industrial, Electric Power, and Transportation, 3) item 4.5 Collecting only domestic shipments by end use instead of domestic and foreign shipments by end use as the total number of shipments, 4) Previous Item 4.4 Deleting the end use type category “Other (describe),” 5) Item 4.10 Collecting domestic shipments by customer type instead of total shipments by customer type, and 6) Previous Item 4.9 Deleting the customer type category “Other (describe).”
For Form EIA-63B, EIA proposes the following additions: 1) Item 3.4 Collecting the percentage of a company’s total sales revenue that is related to manufacturing PV cells and modules and the composition of photovoltaic-related activities, 2) Item 4.3 Energy Conversion Efficiency, 3) Item 6.1 Shipments by origin, and 4) Item 6.2 Shipments by destination. Other changes proposed are 1) Item 4.4 Collecting only domestic shipments by sector instead of total shipments by sector, 2) Item 4.4.1 through 4.4.5 Changing the sector headings from Residential, Commercial, Industrial, Utility, and Other to Residential, Commercial, Industrial, Electric Power, and Transportation, 3) Item 4.5 Collecting only domestic shipments by end use instead of domestic and foreign shipments by end use as the total number of shipments, 4) Previous Item 4.3 Deleting the end use category “Other (describe),” 5) Item 4.10 Collecting domestic shipments by customer type instead of total shipments by customer type, and 6) Previous Item 4.9 Deleting the customer type category “Other (describe).”
For Form EIA-902, EIA proposes the following additions: 1) Item 2.0 Manufacturing Status, 2) Item 3.0 Manufacturer and Marketing Data, 3) Item 4.3 Total Value of GHP Shipments (dollars), 4) Item 4.7 Domestic Shipment by End Use, 5) Item 4.8 Imports, 6) Item 4.9 Exports, 7) Item 4.10 List of Country (ies) of Origin for Imports, 8) Item 4.11 List of Country (ies) of Destination for Exports, 9) Item 5.0 Systems Data, and 10) Item 6.0 Geographic Data. Other changes include changing Domestic Shipments by Customer Type to Shipments by Customer Type.
Previous Item 3.0 “Shipments by Destination is moved to Item 6.2 of the proposed revised form and the three column headings “ARI-320, ARI-325/330, and Other (Non-ARI Rated GHPs)” are collapsed into a single column heading. Item 6.1 was added to collect the same geographic information regarding imports as on Form EIA-63A, “Annual Solar Thermal Collector Manufacturers Survey,” and Form EIA-63B, “Annual Photovoltaic Modules/Cells Manufacturers Surveys.”
Item 4.0 “Geothermal Heat Pump Shipment Data”—modify the heat pump classifications to conform to International Standards Organization standard ISO-13256-1 and American Refrigeration Institute Standard ARI-870.
EIA coordinates with other components of the U.S. Department of Energy as well as affected industry and public interest groups on solar, photovoltaic, and geothermal heat pump data needs and information. These partnerships resulted in the current surveys. In addition, in conjunction with this current request for clearance EIA conducted a presurvey consultation to solicit comments from both data providers and data users. (See Part A. Item 8.)
The information collection proposed in this supporting statement has been reviewed in light of applicable information quality guidelines. It has been determined that the information will be collected, maintained, and used in a manner consistent with the OMB, DOE, and EIA information quality guidelines.
A. Justification
Legal Authority
The authority for this data collection is as follows:
Section 13(b) of the Federal Energy Administration Act of 1974 (FEA Act), 15 U.S.C. § 772(b), (Public Law 93‑275) states:
"All persons owning or operating facilities or business premises who are engaged in any phase of energy supply or major energy consumption shall make available to the [Secretary] such information and periodic reports, records, documents, and other data, relating to the purposes of this Act, including full identification of all data and projections as to source, time, and methodology of development, as the [Secretary] may prescribe by regulation or order as necessary or appropriate for the proper exercise of functions under this Act."
Section 5(b) of the FEA Act, 15 U.S.C. §764(b), in turn, sets forth the general functions of the FEA Act. This section states that to the extent authorized by Section 5(a), 15 U.S.C. §764(a), the [Secretary] shall ‑
"(1) advise the President and the Congress with respect to the establishment of a comprehensive national energy policy in relation to the energy matters for which the [Secretary] has responsibility, and, in coordination with the Secretary of State, the integration of domestic and foreign policies relating to energy resource management;
"(2) assess the adequacy of energy resources to meet demands in the immediate and longer range future for all sectors of the economy and for the general public;...
(9) collect, evaluate, assemble, and analyze energy information; on reserves, production demand, and related economic data;
"(10) work with business, labor, consumer, and other interests and obtain their cooperation;"
As the authority for invoking FEA Section 5(b), Subsection 5(a) (15 U.S.C. §764(a)), states ‑
"Subject to the provisions and procedures set forth in this Act, the [Secretary] shall be responsible for such actions as are taken to assure that adequate provision is made to meet the energy needs of the Nation. To that end, he shall make such plans and direct and conduct such programs related to the production, conservation, use, control, distribution, rationing, and allocation of all forms of energy as are appropriate in connection with those authorities or functions‑
"(3) otherwise specifically vested in the [Secretary] by the Congress."
The authority for invoking Section 5(a)(3) of the FEA Act is provided, in turn, by the Department of Energy Organization Act, Public Law 95‑91, Section 102(6), 42 U.S.C. §7112(6), which states the DOE shall ... "place major emphasis on the development and commercial use of solar, geothermal, recycling, and other technologies utilizing renewable energy resources..."
Section 52(a) of the FEA Act, 15 U.S.C. §790a(a), makes provisions for the [Secretary] to establish...
"...a National Energy Information System.... The System shall contain such information as is required to provide a description of and facilitate analysis of energy supply and consumption within and affecting the United States..."
In addition, Section 52(b)(3), 15 U.S.C. §790a(b)(3), states that, at a minimum, the System will provide information sufficient to carry out statistical and forecasting activities to identify and allow analysis of...
"(3) the sensitivity of energy resource reserves, exploration, development, production, transportation, and consumption to economic factors, environmental constraints, technological improvements, and substitutability of alternate energy sources";
The Energy Information Administration was established by Section 205 of the Department of Energy Organization Act, 42 U.S.C. §7135 (Pub. Law 95-91). The proposed forms will provide data to help EIA fulfill its legislative mandates.
2. Needs and Uses of Data
Data developed from the annual surveys forms, EIA‑63A, EIA-63B and EIA-902 will be published in the Energy Information Administration’s publication, Renewable Energy Annual used by industry, the DOE, and other government agencies. It will be the only reliable, accurate, independent, publicly available information source on the manufacture and shipments of solar thermal collectors, photovoltaic modules/cells, and geothermal heat pumps. This information is used by the Department to assess the contribution of solar/photovoltaics (solar/pv) to satisfying the U.S. demand for energy, the use of solar/pv as alternatives to fossil-based fuels, and the amount of energy both consumed and displaced1 by space heating using geothermal heat pumps. The data derived from the surveys will be widely used in business development, company‑level and State‑level planning, program management, import/export assessment, and other important facets of the domestic solar/pv industry.
The survey data are also used by the office of DOE’s Assistant Secretary for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EE). EE uses the information to assess the market penetration and uses of solar/pv devices and geothermal heat pumps in the United States. Data to be collected focus primarily on imports, manufacturing, and shipments (including exports) of the devices. EIA’s Office of Coal, Nuclear, Electric and Alternate Fuels uses the data to respond to customer requests for current activities and production levels of the solar/pv and geothermal heat pump industries and to assess their roles in overall energy consumption. The data will be used by the organizations listed below.
Industry
The data to be collected using Forms EIA-63A, EIA-63B, and EIA-902 are considered by EIA to be the only reliable data available on these industries. Because solar and photovoltaic devices are cost-competitive with other energy devices in some applications, the industry has the potential for an increasing growth rate and is a source for potentially satisfying a larger percentage of the U.S. energy demand. The demand for energy efficiency and reduced environmental emissions are expected to be factors in the demand for solar/pv devices. The industry members, neither individually nor collectively, have been able to maintain data collection efforts, unlike some other energy industries. (The solar thermal manufacturing industry consists of approximately 60 manufacturers while the photovoltaic module/cell manufacturing industry consists of about 50 manufacturers.) These surveys will be the sole source of detailed industry level information.
Geothermal heat pumps are generally installed only in “greenfield” (new) applications because of the extensive earth movement involved. However, in suitable climates they can typically consume or displace a substantial amount of the energy normally consumed for space heating. Demand for geothermal heat pumps has been increasing, as the demand for energy efficiency has increased. As in the solar/PV industries, industry members have, neither individually nor collectively, been able to maintain data collection efforts. (The geothermal heat pump manufacturing industry consists of approximately 15 manufacturers.) This survey will be the sole source of detailed industry level information.
The data from all 3 forms will be used by industry to gauge market penetration levels. In corporate planning, the data will be used to identify problems, to target geographic locations, and to develop marketing strategies. The data will also be used also in planning regional activities. The primary informational areas of Forms EIA-63A/B and EIA-902 of specific interest to industry are:
Amounts Produced (square feet for solar thermal collectors, peak kilowatthours for photovoltaic modules/cells, and total Btu output value of geothermal heat pumps) of manufactured and imported devices;
Destinations of Shipments (by State, types of domestic customer, and exports)
EIA projects that the use of solar/pv devices and geothermal heat pumps will increase in the future—see Annual Energy Outlook 2007. As a result of this, it is expected that the industry will grow and these surveys will continue to provide information needed to gauge the status and changes in their respective industries. Also, in 2005, Congress passed the Energy Policy Act of 2005. Section 206 of this Act contains financial support provisions for residential renewable energy equipment. EIA has analyzed this legislation and concluded that if Congress were to authorize funding for Section 206, the impact on renewable energy equipment, especially geothermal heat pumps, would be substantial. Additionally, the surveys will continue to provide information needed by the DOE program offices to accurately assess relevant programs.
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EE) of the Department of Energy (DOE)
EE makes policy decisions regarding energy efficiency and renewable energy programs at the DOE. As part of this function, the EE makes decisions regarding the direction and focus of the solar/pv and geothermal heat pump technologies and industry trends and programs. Independent, reliable national data on the shipments of such devices are unavailable from any source other than these surveys. The survey results will be the only survey‑based information regarding the industry and will be useful to the Assistant Secretary in making policy decisions regarding the program areas.
Technical Considerations
The survey forms are designed to minimize respondent burden while still satisfying the requirements for data from the DOE and user communities. The surveys are collected through an internet-based data collection system. Surveys may also be submitted via fax and e-mail. A respondent may also submit their survey response by mailing it in, however few are submitted by this means.
Efforts to Identify Duplication
The EIA has searched its resources for other surveys being conducted by the DOE that might duplicate this survey and has identified only one, the Bureau of the Census’ Current Industrial Report MA333M, product code 333415G (see http://www.census.gov/industry/1/ma333m05.pdf). This survey tracks annually geothermal heat pumps, but only provides information on the number of companies, total quantity sold, and total value of units sold. MA333M collects no information on the technical and performance characteristics of the heat pumps, the sectors into which they or sold or their end use, or any geographical characteristics regarding origin/destination of geothermal heat pumps. MA333M also collects data that covers PV cells and modules (see http://www.census.gov/industry/1/ma334q05.pdf), but this information includes solar cells used in computer products. The Bureau of the Census also collects monthly information on the import and export of geothermal heat pumps, solar thermal panels and PV cells and modules, but, again, only for total shipments and value. The EIA has also discussed the survey with various industry and trade representatives, and none knew of comparable data that were available on the industry.
Provisions for Reducing Burden on Small Business
The EIA has designed the survey so that small businesses are not unduly burdened. Most of the data requested should be readily available from accounting or sales records. In addition some sections of the form are modestly simplified. Respondents are now asked to report volumes through most of the survey. Previously requested percentages for origin/destination, which required additional calculations, are eliminated. In addition, EIA now collects these data via Internet Data Collection methods, which should result in faster submissions and fewer follow-up contacts required with respondents.
6. Results of Collecting Data Less Frequently
The data will be collected once per year. Data collected less frequently would not be timely, and the DOE would not be able to adequately monitor changes in these important industries.
7. Special Circumstances
The data are collected in a manner consistent with the guidelines in 5 C.F.R. 1320.6 for implementing the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (P. L. 104-13).
8. Summary of Consultations Outside the EIA
On April 3rd, 2007, a Federal Register notice (72 FR 15872) was published soliciting public comment on the proposed revision and extension of the surveys. The EIA received no public comments in response to this notice.
9. Decision to Provide Any Payment or Gift To Respondents
EIA will not provide any payment or gift to respondents.
10. Provisions Regarding Confidentiality of Information
The information reported on Forms EIA-63A, EIA-63B and EIA-902 will be protected and not disclosed to the public to the extent that it satisfies the criteria for exemption under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. §552, the DOE regulations, 10 C.F.R. §1004.11, implementing the FOIA, and the Trade Secrets Act, 18 U.S.C. §1905.
The Federal Energy Administration Act requires the EIA to provide company-specific data to other Federal agencies when requested for official use. The information reported on this form may also be made available, upon request, to another component of the Department of Energy (DOE); to any Committee of Congress, the General Accounting Office, or other Federal agencies authorized by law to receive such information. A court of competent jurisdiction may obtain this information in response to an order. The information may be used for any nonstatistical purposes such as administrative, regulatory, law enforcement, or adjudicatory purposes.
Disclosure limitation procedures will be applied to the financial data published from EIA-63A, EIA-63B and EIA-902 survey information on the dollar value of shipments and complete systems to ensure that the risk of disclosure of sensitive identifiable information is very small.
Disclosure limitation procedures are not applied to the statistical data published from all the other EIA-63A, EIA-63B and EIA-902 survey information. Thus, there may be some statistics that are based on data from fewer than three respondents, or that are dominated by data from one or two large respondents. In these cases, it may be possible for a knowledgeable person to estimate the information reported by a specific respondent.
11. Justification of Sensitive Questions
No questions of a sensitive nature are asked in this survey.
12. Respondent Burden
The estimated burden for the EIA-63A will be 270 hours per year (60 respondents x 4.5 per response). The estimated burden for the EIA-63B will be 225 hours per year (50 respondents x 4.5 per response). The estimated burden for the EIA-902 will be 67.5 hours per year (15 respondents x 4.5 per response). The Overall estimated annual burden for all three forms will be 562.5 hours.
The estimated annual cost for the EIA-63A will be $ 15,930.00 (270 burden hours x $59 per hour)*. The estimated annual cost for the EIA-63B will be $ 13,275.00 (225 burden hours x $59 per hour)*. The estimated annual cost for the EIA-902 will be $ 3,982.50 (67.5 burden hours x $59 per hour)*. The overall estimated annual cost of the respondent burden for the renewable surveys is $33,187.50 (562.5 burden hours x $59 per hour).
*An average cost per hour of $59 is used because that is the average loaded (salary plus benefits) cost for an EIA employee. EIA assumes that the survey respondent workforce completing surveys for EIA is comparable with the EIA workforce.
13. Costs to Respondents
There are no capital and/or startup cost components or operations and maintenance items associated with this data collection. The information is maintained in the normal course of business. Therefore, other than the cost of burden hours included in Item 12 above, there are no additional costs for generating, maintaining, and providing the information.
14. Estimates of Cost to the Federal Government
a. Development and Maintenance Costs $74,000
b. Collection Costs $21,000
c. Processing Costs $57,000
d. Dissemination Costs $21,000
Total Annual Cost $173,000
15. Program Changes or Adjustments
For the EIA-63A, the burden change is 75 hours. The change is due to “Agency Discretion” (adding more elements). For the EIA-63B, the burden change is 62 hours. The change is due to “Agency Discretion” (adding more elements.) The EIA-902 is a new form added to this OMB number and, therefore will be an increase 67.5 hours. However, the current OMB number for the EIA-902 (1905-0204) will be discontinued.
The EIA-902 is being redesigned to collect information generally comparable to that collected on EIA-63A/B. The burden estimate is based on EIA’s unified data collection approach for all three renewable forms, which collect modestly simplified information and the implementation of the Internet Data Collection methods, which result in fewer follow-up contacts required with respondents.
16. Plans for Tabulation and Publication
The time schedule for the next annual surveys and related analysis activities is as follows:
1. Send Notice of Reporting Requirements 01/15/08
2 Data Collection, Processing and Analysis 01/16/08-05/30/08
3. Tabulation of Data 06/02/08-06/30/08
4. Early Release of Data to Web 8/2008
5. Publish data as part of "Renewable
Energy Annual" 11/2008
17. Display of Expiration Date on Form
The OMB approval expiration date will be displayed on the Forms EIA-63A/B and EIA-902.
18. Exceptions to Certification Statement
No exceptions to the certification statement are being taken.
B. Collections of Information Employing Statistical Methods
1. Description of the Survey Plan
The notice of reporting requirements and options for reporting will be sent to approximately 125 companies comprising the universe of U.S. solar collector, photovoltaic module/cell, and geothermal heat pump manufacturers. Potential respondents will be identified from existing mailing lists; DOE and EIA databases; industry/manufacturer directories; trade publications; and personal inquiries.
2. The Sampling Methodology and Estimating Procedures
The population is so small and diverse that sampling is not feasible.
3. Maximizing the Response Rate
The EIA will use standard procedures to conduct the surveys. An introductory letter signed by an EIA official will be sent to the owner/manager of each affected U.S. manufacturer identified by EIA. To improve timeliness, accuracy and ease of reporting, respondents will be using EIA’s Internal Data Collection (IDC) system as the primary mode for reporting information. Follow-up procedures consist of: (1) first email reminder to all companies that have not yet submitted completed survey forms two weeks before due date, (2) second email reminder to all companies that have not submitted completed survey forms two weeks after due date, (3) phone calls to companies that have not responded within one month, (4) a non-response letter from the Division Director to companies that do not respond within 6 weeks, (5) a non-response letter from the Office Director within 2 months, and (6) a letter from the EIA administrator within 10 weeks. Previous response rates for the survey have been 100% and EIA expects to continue to achieve close to a 100% response rate although solar and photovoltaic market activity has increased substantively over the past 3 years.
4. Test Procedures
No additional pretest of the current forms was considered necessary. In prior surveys, the companies have not indicated any problems with the surveys. Discussions with trade organizations did not produce any problems with the proposed data collections.
5. Questions
Questions regarding the Forms EIA-63A/B and EIA-902 may be directed to Fred Mayes of the Department of Energy, Energy Information Administration at (202) 586-1508. The EIA Agency Clearance Officer is Jay Casselberry at (202) 586-8616.
1 Energy consumed: The use of energy such as fossil-based fuels as a source of heat or power.
Energy displaced: Energy from fossil-based fuels that would have been consumed by conventional technologies had not the use of alternative technologies such as the use of solar and geothermal as source of heat or power.
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File Type | application/msword |
File Title | 2008 Renewable Surveys Supporting Statement |
Author | Peter Wong |
Last Modified By | Grace Sutherland |
File Modified | 2007-09-13 |
File Created | 2007-08-24 |