In this report
Overview
TV types
Energy costs of big-screen TVs
ELECTRONICS FORUMS
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March 2008
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Power play
What it costs to run a big-screen TV

Two people holding a large power cord
Illustration by Jing and Mike Co.
Energy usage probably isn’t the top priority when you’re buying a new TV, but it will affect your electric bills for years to come. Home heating and cooling, lighting, and large appliances account for much of your energy consumption, but big-screen TVs are no slouches at sucking up the juice. Some sizes and types use more electricity than an energy-efficient refrigerator.

Our engineers determined the energy used by typical LCD, plasma, and rear-projection TVs turned on for 8 hours a day (yes, a typical U.S. household watches that much TV), 365 days a year. Most sets didn’t use significantly more energy than a 32- to 36-inch picture-tube TV. But 50-inch plasmas with 1080p resolution used twice as much energy as the biggest picture-tube set and more than a comparable LCD TV.

Not surprisingly, bigger screens of all types consume more electricity than smaller ones. With LCD and rear-projection TVs, resolution has almost no effect on energy consumption because all pixels in the screen are illuminated by the same backlight. With plasma sets, however, 1080p models use more energy than 720p models. That’s because 1080p sets have more pixels, each of which is illuminated separately. With LCD sets, the higher the backlight setting, the more electricity used. We set the backlight at the midpoint for our calculations.

Even if the cost differences of a few dollars a month don’t matter much to your budget, keep in mind that the millions of TVs used in American households consume a huge amount of energy. There’s obviously an environmental advantage to using a more-efficient TV.


PRODUCT ANNUAL COST
20-cu.-ft. refrigerator (a newer top-freezer) $50
25-cu.-ft. refrigerator (a newer side-by-side) 65
32-inch picture-tube 40
36-inch picture-tube 50
37-inch LCD 50
40-inch LCD 55
56-inch rear-projection 65
42-inch plasma, 720p 70
52-inch LCD 80
50-inch plasma, 720p 80
50-inch plasma, 1080p 110
Based on Department of Energy’s 2007 national average pricing for energy, 10.65 cents per kilowatt-hour.