Former Vice President Al Gore calls it an inconvenient truth. But global warming represents an attractive opportunity for the power-management industry, which can employ its expertise in reducing
energy usage to benefit consumers around the globe—as well as
benefit the globe itself.
The industry is now turning its attention to long-neglected white
goods, which are the biggest users of electricity in homes. As developing regions of the world increase their demand for such products,
electricity usage is soaring, along with the volume of greenhouse
gasses spewed into the atmosphere by power plants.
Driven by government programs that encourage consumers to
buy energy-efficient appliances, consumer demand for such products is growing. To achieve better efficiency, appliances are integrating more semiconductor content for controlling, sensing, monitoring,
and connectivity.
Because of this, white goods will be the fastest growing market
for power-management devices during the next five years. The worldwide market for major appliances will expand to 462 million units in
2010, rising at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 5% from
379 million units in 2006.
Shipments of voltage regulators for white goods are expected to
rise at a CAGR of 29.8% from 2006 to 2010. Meanwhile, shipments
of interface products are expected to grow at an 18% CAGR, while
transistors will rise by 12.1% and diodes by 6.1%.
So while global warming may be an inconvenient truth for some,
it's a huge opportunity for power-management designers.