Trump’s showerhead quest swirls down the drain
Donald Trump’s pursuit of “perfect” hair may be lifelong, but the former president’s hope of achieving that goal by tinkering with the country’s showerhead requirements has come to an end.
The Energy Department has reversed a Trump-era rule increasing how much water could be used in a shower by allowing multiple nozzles to carry equal amounts of water at once.
In closing the loophole Tuesday, Biden officials restored a 2013 standard that most showerheads on the market were already meeting or exceeding.
Manufacturers did not demand the rollback. Instead, the call for more powerful showers came from Trump himself, who complained that the conservation standards led to low water pressure and a dissatisfying shower experience.
“So showerheads — you take a shower, the water doesn’t come out,” Trump said at a White House event last year. “You want to wash your hands, the water doesn’t come out. So what do you do? You just stand there longer or you take a shower longer? Because my hair — I don’t know about you, but it has to be perfect. Perfect.”
Since 1994, federal law has capped flow from a shower head to 2.5 gallons of water per minute. After manufacturers started producing more luxurious shower fixtures with more than one nozzle, the Obama administration amended the rule so that the same limit applied to the entire fixture.
In its quest for a stronger flow, the Trump administration finalized a rule last December that reinterpreted what a shower fixture was, applying the federal limit to each individual nozzle. This meant that a showerhead with three nozzles could use 7.5 gallons of water per minute. The regulation did not put a limit on the total amount.
Reversing this rule is unlikely to affect the shower head market, and consumers might not notice a change. Few manufacturers offer fixtures that fall under the Trumpera definition, which was signed in that administration’s last weeks in office, according to the Appliance Standards Awareness Project, an energy conservation advocacy group.
“This was a silly loophole from the beginning, and the department was right to fix it,” said Andrew deLaski, the group’s executive director. “The good news is there was no clamoring for products that took advantage of this, and we can put this whole episode in the past.”
Trump’s showerhead rule was part of a broader effort within the administration to relax energy efficiency standards and regulations for an array of household appliances, including dishwashers, washing machines and clothes dryers.
Although few Americans pay attention to these rules, environmentalists say they help combat climate change by lowering energy use from fossil fuels. Limits on water usage have also helped Western states cope with an extreme drought, which has left some reservoirs at or near historic lows.
Industry did push for some of the Trump efficiency rules, such as one finalized late last year that allowed manufacturers to continue selling less-efficient furnaces and water heaters. Natural gas suppliers argued the rule would give consumers more choices, while environmentalists warned it would lock in planet-warming pollution from home heating equipment.
Although Trump focused most of his griping about bathroom fixtures on showerheads, he also complained about modern toilets and energy-saving light bulbs. “People are flushing toilets 10 times, 15 times, as opposed to once,” he said just a couple of weeks before the 2020 election to a receptive crowd in Carson City, Nev. He also singled out the LED light bulb, which he said, “Costs you five times as much, and it makes you look orange.”
The Trump administration never did propose a new toilet standard. But in late 2019, it finalized a rule that delayed the country’s transition to more efficient compact fluorescent and LED bulbs.