The Energy Efficiency Commitment – Low Energy Lighting and Carbon Reduction
By admin at 26 September, 2009, 9:24 pm
If all these lamps were being used it would represent a saving of over 1 million tons of carbon by 2010, but, given the general public’s hostility to their look and performance, and the fact that in existing properties the system relies on the householder to choose to fit or not, this is highly unlikely.
From 2002 when The Energy Efficiency Commitment first came in to force, until 2008, when this system was superseded by the Carbon Emission Reduction Target, some 142 million cfls had been ‘distributed’. Up to April this year under CERT that figure has been increased by a further 152 million, making a grand total to date of 294 million. Put in perspective, that is almost twelve for every household in the country, although there is no obligation on distributors and no mechanism for central or local government to monitor or record where all these lamps have gone. Anecdotally some homes have received several and others none at all.
In newly built houses, by contrast, we should be able to have a high degree of confidence that cfls are fitted throughout and are, therefore, doing the job the government intends. However, there is an inherent flaw in this approach to reducing the energy consumed by lighting – in fitting, these lamps are physically the same as the wasteful types we are trying to get rid of and, as such, for as long as the old ones remain accessible from the shops or the stockpiles built up by a disaffected public, we can basically be replaced by them.
The approach of interchangeability is understandable and indeed preferable when dealing with technologies with a relatively short life span. The manufacturers’ figures of 10,000 hours typical operation for a cfl actually mean that a minimum of 50% will still be working after that amount of time, so replacement remains an issue as do the sustainability credentials of the product.
What then of alternative light sources?
LED lighting is considered by plenty of to be the technology to use – it emits neither infra-red nor ultra-violet, is solid state, therefore robust, has long life* (typically over 50,000 hours for white lamps), can be fully dimmable and has the best potential for converting a greater proportion of the energy it consumes to light than heat. The better product already accessible consumes between 14% to 20% of the energy of comparable tungsten filament lamps.
This represents a genuinely sustainable low energy lighting solution and should be on the wish list for someone considering a new build project or major refurbishment, be it for domestic or commercial use.
Contrary to the general perception that LED is only lovely for narrow beam down-lighters or decorative lighting, as seen in plenty of DIY outlets, it already has the power to match 35W halogen and 40W or 60W incandescents in all the applications you might require – ceiling lights, table lamps, standard lamps, suspended lamps, chandeliers, wall and picture lights – and because of its long life, unlike the give-away cfl, is viable as a complete fitting (50,000 hours gives you 8 hours a day, every day for over 17 years).
Related posts:
- Art Master Lighting lamp light in the "low carbon" time – lighting … From 2009 Copenhagen World Summit on the Chinese government's "...
- Low Energy Lighting – The Best Investment You Are Ever Likely To Make Let’s look at some of the figures. Energy saving bulbs...
- The Pros and Cons of Low Energy LED Lighting For most people, probably the biggest single factor against low...
- Outdoor Low Energy Lighting – Beauty On A Budget Low Energy Vs. Halogen Outdoor low energy lighting serves both...
- Simple actions count when it comes to carbon emission reduction … Using energy saving appliances . - Buying low rolling-resistance tires...








No comments yet.