Broadband & Utility Leaders Extend Energy Efficiency Agreement for Home Internet Devices

Broadband leaders and utility companies, including CTA, NCTA, and PG&E, have extended the Voluntary Agreement for Small Network Equipment through 2028. The initiative has already improved home internet device energy efficiency by 89% since 2015, and new targets aim for an additional 10% reduction by 2026. With compliance from major ISPs and device manufacturers, this industry-led effort is making home broadband more sustainable while enhancing performance.
Broadband & Utility Leaders Extend Energy Efficiency Agreement for Home Internet Devices

The Consumer Technology Association (CTA), NCTA โ€“ The Internet & Television Association (NCTA), Pacific Gas & Electric (PG&E), broadband internet service providers, and home network device manufacturers have announced an extension of the Voluntary Agreement aimed at improving the energy efficiency of home internet equipment through 2028.


This industry-led initiative sets more rigorous energy-efficiency targets, ensuring that new devices such as modems, routers, and Wi-Fi extenders will consume even less power, reducing overall energy use while supporting increased broadband performance. The new efficiency levels are projected to enhance device efficiency by an additional 10% starting in 2026.

How the Broadband Industry Has Cut Energy Use by 89% Since 2015

Originally established in 2015, the Voluntary Agreement for Small Network Equipment (SNE) Efficiency has been instrumental in improving energy efficiency across home broadband devices while keeping pace with advancing technology.

New Energy Efficiency Report: 98.6% of Home Internet Devices Meet Standards

The latest independent report, evaluating more than 400 home network device models, underscores the success of the agreement:

  • 98.6% of devices met the 2023 energy-efficiency targets (Tier 3 levels).
  • Since 2015, energy efficiency has improved by 89% relative to broadband speeds.
  • Broadband providers and device manufacturers have consistently exceeded the 90% efficiency compliance threshold.
  • Future energy efficiency Tier 4 levels are already being developed for continued reductions in power consumption.

โ€œThese results showcase how industry collaboration can drive meaningful energy efficiency improvements while fostering innovation,โ€ said Ally Peck, Senior Manager of Environmental Policy and Sustainability at CTA.

How ISPs and Manufacturers Ensure Energy-Efficient Home Internet Devices

Under the agreement, 90% of all new home internet devices purchased by service providers or sold by manufacturers must meet the latest energy-efficiency standards. Devices covered include:

  • Broadband Modems โ€“ Devices that provide high-speed internet access.
  • Integrated Access Devices (IADs) โ€“ Modems with built-in routers and/or VoIP capabilities.
  • Local Network Equipment (LNEs) โ€“ Standalone routers, network extenders, and access points.

The Independent Administrator and Auditor, D+R International, ensures compliance through third-party audits and lab testing. In 2023, all audited devices met the required efficiency levels.

Wi-Fi 6E & Fiber Growth: Balancing Performance with Energy Savings

The 2023 report highlights a 6% increase in power consumption compared to 2022, primarily due to new Wi-Fi 6E and fiber-based technologies. However, these increases are significantly outweighed by the long-term efficiency improvements:

89% improvement in energy efficiency per unit of broadband speed since 2015.
Devices now support multi-gigabit speeds with minimal increase in power consumption.
Future efficiency standards (Tier 4) will push energy savings even further.

โ€œThe agreement ensures that as devices become more powerful, they also remain energy-efficient,โ€ said Debbie Fitzgerald, Director at CableLabs.

Broadband Providers & Tech Leaders Unite for Greener Internet Devices

The Voluntary Agreement represents 85% of the U.S. wireline broadband market, including:

  • Broadband Providers: AT&T, Verizon, Comcast, Charter, Cox, Frontier, and Altice USA.
  • Device Manufacturers: Google, ASUS, Netgear, TP-Link, Linksys, Sagemcom, Plume, eero, and others.
  • Energy Advocate: Pacific Gas & Electric (PG&E) ensures rigorous efficiency commitments.

In addition to direct device improvements, the agreement also promotes consumer awareness, with participating manufacturers and ISPs providing energy efficiency details at energy-efficiency.us.

Next-Gen Broadband: AI, Sustainability & Higher Energy Savings by 2028

With the agreement extended through 2028, industry leaders are preparing for next-generation broadband technologies while maintaining their commitment to energy-efficient innovation. Key focus areas include:

Adoption of Tier 4 efficiency levels to further reduce energy consumption.
Integration of AI-powered network management to optimize power use dynamically.
Development of more sustainable materials and manufacturing practices.

The Voluntary Agreement has already proven its success, saving consumers money, reducing environmental impact, and improving broadband performance. As the industry prepares for the next phase of broadband evolution, this initiative ensures that energy efficiency remains a priority.

Learn more about the Voluntary Agreement at energy-efficiency.us.


Recent Content

NVIDIA has launched a major U.S. manufacturing expansion for its next-gen AI infrastructure. Blackwell chips will now be produced at TSMCโ€™s Arizona facilities, with AI supercomputers assembled in Texas by Foxconn and Wistron. Backed by partners like Amkor and SPIL, NVIDIA is localizing its AI supply chain from silicon to system integrationโ€”laying the foundation for โ€œAI factoriesโ€ powered by robotics, Omniverse digital twins, and real-time automation. By 2029, NVIDIA aims to manufacture up to $500B in AI infrastructure domestically.
Samsung has launched two new rugged devicesโ€”the Galaxy XCover7 Pro smartphone and the Tab Active5 Pro tabletโ€”designed for high-intensity fieldwork in sectors like logistics, healthcare, and manufacturing. These devices offer military-grade durability, advanced 5G connectivity, and enterprise-ready security with Samsung Knox Vault. Features like hot-swappable batteries, gloved-touch sensitivity, and AI-powered tools enhance productivity and reliability in harsh environments.
Nokia, Digita, and CoreGo have partnered to roll out private 5G networks and edge computing solutions at high-traffic event venues. Using Nokia’s Digital Automation Cloud (DAC) and CoreGoโ€™s payment and access tech, the trio delivers real-time data flow, reliable connectivity, and enhanced guest experience across Finland and international locationsโ€”serving over 2 million attendees to date.
OpenAI is developing a prototype social platform featuring an AI-powered content feed, potentially placing it in direct competition with Elon Musk’s X and Metaโ€™s AI initiatives. Spearheaded by Sam Altman, the project aims to harness user-generated content and real-time interaction to train advanced AI systemsโ€”an approach already used by rivals like Grok and Llama.
AI Pulse: Telecomโ€™s Next Frontier is a definitive guide to how AI is reshaping the telecom landscape โ€” strategically, structurally, and commercially. Spanning over 130 pages, this MWC 2025 special edition explores AIโ€™s growing maturity in telecom, offering a comprehensive look at the technologies and trends driving transformation.

Explore strategic AI pillarsโ€”from AI Ops and Edge AI to LLMs, AI-as-a-Service, and governanceโ€”and learn how telcos are building AI-native architectures and monetization models. Discover insights from 30+ global CxOs, unpacking shifts in leadership thinking around purpose, innovation, and competitive advantage.

The edition also examines connected industries at the intersection of Private 5G, AI, and Satelliteโ€”fueling transformation in smart manufacturing, mobility, fintech, ports, sports, and more. From fan engagement to digital finance, from smart cities to the industrial metaverse, this is the roadmap to telecomโ€™s next eraโ€”where intelligence is the new infrastructure, and telcos become the enablers of everything connected.
In AI in Telecom: Strategic Themes, Maturity, and the Road Ahead, we explore how AI has shifted from buzzword to backbone for global telecom leaders. From AI-native networks and edge inferencing, to domain-specific LLMs and behavioral cybersecurity, this article maps out the strategic pillars, real-world use cases, and monetization models driving the AI-powered telecom era. Featuring CxO insights from Telefรณnica, KDDI, MTN, Telstra, and Orange, it captures the voice of a sector transforming infrastructure into intelligence.

Download Magazine

With Subscription
Whitepaper
Telecom networks are facing unprecedented complexity with 5G, IoT, and cloud services. Traditional service assurance methods are becoming obsolete, making AI-driven, real-time analytics essential for competitive advantage. This independent industry whitepaper explores how DPUs, GPUs, and Generative AI (GenAI) are enabling predictive automation, reducing operational costs, and improving service quality....
Whitepaper
Explore the collaboration between Purdue Research Foundation, Purdue University, Ericsson, and Saab at the Aviation Innovation Hub. Discover how private 5G networks, real-time analytics, and sustainable innovations are shaping the "Airport of the Future" for a smarter, safer, and greener aviation industry....
Article & Insights
This article explores the deployment of 5G NR Transparent Non-Terrestrial Networks (NTNs), detailing the architecture's advantages and challenges. It highlights how this "bent-pipe" NTN approach integrates ground-based gNodeB components with NGSO satellite constellations to expand global connectivity. Key challenges like moving beam management, interference mitigation, and latency are discussed, underscoring...

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Scroll to Top