Font Sizer

Search for Clients and Projects

Search results for "market transformation":

ProjectClientWhen
Process Evaluation of Upstream Lighting and Market Transformation Programs and Residential/Non-Residential Needs Characterization Southern California Edison 2013
Consumer Electronics (Televisions Market Progress Evaluation Report #2 and #3 and Quantitative Assessment of Market Progress) Northwest Energy Efficiency Alliance 2013
Food Processing Initiative Market Progress Evaluation Report #8 Northwest Energy Efficiency Alliance 2013
kW Crackdown/CRE Savings Northwest Energy Efficiency Alliance 2011
Ductless Heat Pump 2 - MPER #1 Northwest Energy Efficiency Alliance/Ecotope 2011
BetterBricks Vertical Markets - Market Progress Reports Northwest Energy Efficiency Alliance 2010
Pulp & Paper Market Segmentation Northwest Energy Efficiency Alliance 2009

Page #1 of 4   next

home | our vision | projects | clients | our team | contact
copyright © 2011 research into action, inc.
Follow Research Into Action on Twitter Follow us on Twitter
Become our fan on Facebook
Certified by the Women's Business Enterprise National Council
Certified by the National Women Business Owners Corporation

Project: Process Evaluation of Upstream Lighting and Market Transformation Programs and Residential/Non-Residential Needs Characterization

Southern California Edison

In 2011-2013, Research Into Action is part of a team, led by Evergreen Economics, that is conducting a combined process evaluation of Pacific Gas & Electric's and Southern California Edison's upstream lighting and market transformation programs and a nonresidential needs characterization. We are leading the process evaluation (including interviewing program managers and nonresidential trade allies) and participating in nonresidential customer research. The project is particularly timely because the California lighting programs are in a state of major transition from large-scale resource acquisition of cost-effective energy savings to market transformation programs focused on new technologies. This project is providing insights to help California meet its aggressive energy efficiency strategic plan for lighting: a 60 to 80 percent reduction in lighting energy consumption through delivery of advanced lighting to all buildings.