FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Legality
How Are They Sold
Ratings & Testing
Your Risk
Insurance
Are these heat pumps actually illegal to sell in Canada and the US?
Yes — unambiguously. In Canada, every heat pump must be independently certified by an SCC-accredited body, reported to NRCan, and listed in the NRCan Searchable Product Database before a single unit crosses the border. Not one of the copycat units documented in this report satisfies any of those three prerequisites. In the US, units must be certified and registered in the DOE Compliance Certification Management System (CCMS) before distribution. As of the report's publication in March 2026, none of the copycat units are listed in the NRCan database, and only three models appear in the DOE CCMS — all with fabricated data.
What laws are being violated?
In Canada: the Energy Efficiency Act, the Energy Efficiency Regulations 2016, and the Competition Act (R.S.C. 1985, c. C-34). In the US: the Energy Policy and Conservation Act (EPCA), 10 CFR Parts 429 and 430, the FTC Act Section 5, the Lanham Act, and — for brands that filed false data with the DOE — 18 U.S.C. § 1001, the federal statute that makes knowingly false statements to the federal government a criminal offense. The violations include fabricating test data, filing false certifications with regulators, misclassifying products, failing to register products before import, and engaging in deceptive advertising to consumers and professionals.
What penalties can these brands face?
In Canada, fines of up to $200,000 per offense under the Energy Efficiency Act, and Competition Act penalties of up to $10,000,000 for a first violation, $15,000,000 for subsequent violations, or three times the value of the benefit derived — whichever is greater. NRCan can also compel product recalls, require compensation to all purchasers, and seize inventory. In the US: DOE civil penalties of up to $575 per violation, per day, per model; FTC civil penalties of up to $53,088 per violation; forced recalls; injunctive relief; and criminal prosecution under 18 U.S.C. § 1001 for false statements to federal agencies.
Is the "Pending AHRI" logo that some brands display legitimate?
No. Innova confirmed in writing with AHRI that no such logo exists and that its use is not permitted under any circumstances. AHRI does not issue pending certification marks of any kind. Ortech, which displays this logo, is deliberately creating the false impression that independent verification is underway or imminent. This constitutes a false representation under the FTC Act, the Lanham Act, and the Competition Act, and provides AHRI itself with grounds to pursue action for the unauthorized use of its name and branding.
Can a brand defend itself by saying it didn't know the OEM data was fake?
No — for two reasons. First, Canadian law requires independent certification by an SCC-accredited body before importation. A private-label brand that simply accepts the OEM's data sheet and imports on that basis has failed to satisfy the legal requirement. Second, the mathematical contradictions in the published specifications are visible to anyone who reads the spec sheet. A brand that publishes 10,000 BTU at 535W and an EER of 8.9 without noticing that 10,000 ÷ 535 = 18.7 either did not check its own data or chose not to. Neither ignorance nor indifference is a defense under federal law.
What is Innova's $1 million challenge, and what does it prove?
Innova offers to pay one million US dollars to any manufacturer, distributor, engineer, or entity that produces a certified, independent laboratory test report from an SCC-accredited certification body confirming that any copycat unit meets all of its published performance ratings when tested under the correct NRCan or DOE procedures. The challenge has not been claimed. Its significance is not the prize itself — it is that not one of these brands has attempted to meet it. A company with genuine, certified performance data has no reason to decline a million-dollar invitation to produce it.
Has the DOE actually penalized any of these brands before?
Yes — and the record illustrates exactly why the fraud continues. Ice Air, one of the brands documented in this report, has been penalized by the DOE twice. In 2018, DOE ordered Ice Air to pay $82,379 after finding its PTAC model 8RSCT13 violated federal energy conservation standards (DOE Order 2014-SE-43001). In 2024, DOE ordered Ice Air to pay an additional $28,300 after the company failed to certify certain central air-conditioner and heat-pump models (DOE Order 2023-SE-16077). Ice Air settled both times — and is still selling noncompliant heat pumps. The combined penalties across a decade of violations total roughly $110,679. A single apartment building installation of 100 units generates more revenue than that. The DOE's enforcement authority is real. The penalties, as currently structured, are not large enough to make compliance cheaper than non-compliance. That is the structural incentive that makes this fraud not just possible, but persistent.