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                                                                                           Updated June 25, 2020

WaterSense® Program: Congressional Authorization


WaterSense is a voluntary labeling program created by the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to encourage
the development and use of water-efficient products and
services. Through WaterSense, EPA develops water
efficiency specifications for products, certain services, and
homes; licenses third-party certification bodies; and
maintains a registry of WaterSense-labeled products and
certified services.

EPA  initially established WaterSense in 2006. The 115th
Congress authorized and expanded WaterSense in
America's Water Infrastructure Act of 2018 (AWIA; P.L.
115-270), Section 4306 (42 U.S.C. §6294b).

The Trump  Administration has proposed to eliminate
funding for the WaterSense program in FY2018, FY2019,
FY2020,  and FY2021. The Further Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2020 (P.L. 116-94), included FY2020
appropriations for EPA and other federal agencies: FY2020
funding for WaterSense is the same as the FY2019 enacted
funding level of $4.5 million, according to the joint
explanatory statement that accompanied P.L. 116-94.
AWIA   does not include an authorization of appropriations
for WaterSense.

A description of the WaterSense program, authorization,
and revisions follows.

Figure  I. WaterSense  Labels









      Label for products that  Label for promotional
      have been indepenidently partners to encourage use of
      certified to meet fPA WaterSense-labeled products,

Source: EPA.gov.
Notes: Compiled by CRS.

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WaterSense supports voluntary partnerships with service
providers, manufacturers, retailers, and other organizations
that manufacture, distribute, certify, or promote
WaterSense-labeled products, homes, and/or services.

The WaterSense program  design is similar to ENERGY
STAR,  another voluntary labeling program established by
EPA  in 1992. The Department of Energy and EPA jointly
administer ENERGY   STAR,  which was authorized in the


Energy Policy Act of 2005 (P.L. 109-58, §131). For more
information, see CRS In Focus IF10753, ENERGY STAR
Program, by Corrie E. Clark.

Under WaterSense, EPA  establishes water efficiency
specifications for products, services, and homes. These
specifications also identify which testing protocols should
be used to evaluate the product. EPA requires
manufacturers, service providers, and home builders who
wish to use a WaterSense label to have their products,
services, and homes certified that they achieve the water
efficiency specification. Third-party organizations provide
the certifications. EPA licenses these certification
organizations, which must also maintain accreditation from
EPA-approved  accreditation bodies.

Products
EPA  has issued WaterSense specifications for a variety of
products, including residential toilets, showerheads,
bathroom faucets, commercial toilets, urinals, irrigation
controllers, and spray sprinkler bodies.

To obtain certification to use a WaterSense label,
manufacturers must first develop products that meet EPA
specifications. EPA states that a water-efficient product
should generally (1) reduce water use by at least 20% from
federally mandated water-use conservation standards and
(2) function at least as well as regular models. For products
without federal standards, such as irrigation equipment,
WaterSense certifications are based on calculations of
average efficiency.

Manufacturers may submit their products to accredited
third-party organizations for certification that the products
comply with established water efficiency specifications.
Once a product is certified, it does not have to be
recertified. However, EPA requires certification
organizations to conduct annual market surveillance on at
least 15% of the models that it has certified for each
product category and report the results to EPA.

Manufacturers of WaterSense-labeled products sign a
partnership agreement with EPA. In the agreement, EPA
expects manufacturers to report the number of WaterSense-
labeled products sold annually. EPA uses this data to
calculate water and energy savings attributable to the
WaterSense program  as well as the return on investment.

EPA's  2018 WaterSense Accomplishments  report states
that over 30,000 product models have been certified. More
than half of these products are faucet models.


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