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February 12, 2007 8:01 AM PST

City tries to cut energy bills with LEDs

Raleigh, N.C., wants to become LED City.

The city, which is in the center of the state's tech hub, is conducting experiments to see if it can cut energy consumption and maintenance costs by replacing conventional public light fixtures with ones based around light-emitting diodes.

In December, Raleigh--in conjunction with LED manufacturer Cree--replaced high-pressure sodium lights in a downtown parking garage with LED lights. Although the LED lamps cost substantially more than regular sodium lamps, they require less electricity and need to be replaced far less often.

Early projections indicate that the expense of retrofitting the garage's lighting system will get recovered in cost savings in two to three years, said Mayor Charles Meeker.

"We are saving over 40 percent of the energy we would otherwise use," said Meeker, who's currently on his third two-year term. "And the quality is better. With sodium lights, you get bugs in the cover, and the light is kind of yellowish."

Parking lot with LEDs

Next, Raleigh will kick off a pilot program with LED streetlights and will also seek funds to convert the city's other parking garages. If all seven municipal parking lots in the city were retrofitted, it could save the city $100,000 a year in energy consumption and decreased maintenance, he said. The lights in stadiums, gyms, schools, parks and other public venues could be next.

If successful, the experiment could ultimately serve as a showcase for something several LED manufacturers are angling to accomplish: maneuvering LEDs into the commercial and residential lighting market. LEDs are used in flashlights and car headlights and taillights, but commercial and residential lighting represents a much larger opportunity. Approximately 22 percent of the electricity consumed in the United States goes toward lighting, according to the U.S. Department of Energy.

LEDs can last 75,000 hours or longer and consume far less power than standard incandescent bulbs. Only about 5 percent of the energy that goes into conventional bulbs actually turns into light; the rest gets dissipated as heat. If 25 percent of the lightbulbs in the United States were converted to LEDs putting out 150 lumens (a measure of light output) per watt--higher than the most current models--the country as a whole could save $115 billion in utility costs cumulatively by 2025, according to University of California Santa Barbara professor Stephen DenBaars.

LEDs also have begun to outperform fluorescent bulbs in energy efficiency, said Cree CEO Chuck Swoboda. The company last year unveiled an LED that can put out about 70 lumens per watt. That's a bit better than many compact fluorescent bulbs--those cone-shaped things that fit into regular light fixtures--on the market, which often get 60 lumens per watt.

The problem up until now has been cost. Consumers and businesses can buy lighting fixtures based around LEDs now, but the price is high compared with other types of lights. While fluorescent manufacturers dispute many of the energy efficiency claims by the LED industry, they also note that their products cost far less.

The rising cost of electricity, combined with the declining prices of LEDs, however, is making diodes more attractive to manufacturers of lighting fixtures, Swoboda said. Over the next year, LED-based light fixtures for commercial buildings and signs will begin to increase in number, he said. The commercial market in many ways is inherently more attractive because they don't need to be replaced as often, which cuts down the number of times the maintenance crew has to put up a ladder.

"When you get into lights that are on 24-7, the maintenance costs certainly go up. LEDs are going to find their ways quicker there than other markets," Swoboda said. "The home is not typically mission critical."

Nonetheless, he added that LED lights would likely begin to appear in new homes in six months to a year. Contractors can absorb the cost in the overall price of the home.

Making an LED light fixture stronger or less bright is largely a matter of how the fixture is designed and the number of LEDs inside. A lawn light based around LEDs might have two of the diodes inside, said Swoboda; a light for a garage might have 84.

LEDs emit red, blue or green light on their own. To make white light, the light from blue LEDs passes through a yellowish phosphor.

See more CNET content tagged:
light-emitting diode, Cree, electricity, diode, Raleigh

Add a Comment (Log in or register) 11 comments
LEDs vs CFs ?
by punterjoe February 12, 2007 9:37 AM PST
OK, Compact Flourescents still hold a significant up-front cost advantage, efficiency seems close enough to be out of contention. How about the AFTER life cycle? CFs contain some heavy metals that make proper disposal an issue. What's the disposal/recycling situation with LED lighting?
Reply to this comment
LEDs vs CFs
by scottthesculptor February 12, 2007 10:04 AM PST
Just total volume of waste material for one.
Also the volume of phospor atop the bluish LED in a "white LED" is quite small in comparison to the phosphors lining the glass tube of the CFs.
CFs require high freq converters in their bases so there's additional metals and insulators.
You could say that LEDs require DC so the have their own associated additional waste - but many applications use the power supply to ower many LED fixtures.
The phosphors are much more toxic than the LED itself. Hoefully some materials engineer will stun the world with a true white LED or the mixed RGB LED white sets will end up cheaper than adding the phosphors
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apples to oranges?
by treads0322 February 12, 2007 10:40 AM PST
"...Only about 5 percent of the energy that goes into conventional bulbs actually turns into light; the rest gets dissipated as heat...LEDs [put] out 150 lumens (a measure of light output) per watt..."

These statistics would be much more effective if some direct comparisons were made between the two technologies - tell us how much energy consumed by LEDs is used to produce light, or how many lumens a conventional light produces per watt. Maybe this isn't a journal paper, but CNet does have a fairly technical audience and I imagine this is the sort of thing we'd all prefer to see in an article.

-Mark
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Contractors can absorb the cost ...
by DougDbug February 12, 2007 12:15 PM PST
>>>> Contractors can absorb the cost in the overall price of the home.

HA HA! HA! HA! There's nothing a contractor likes more than "absorbing costs"!

I'm sure the developer is willing to ADD the cost to the price, with a "small" mark-up.

If the buyer can finance the cost of the lights over 30 years along with the cost of the house, that makes sense. The combined house-payment and utilities should be less with the LED fixtures.
Reply to this comment
LEDS=Bombs
by airwalkery2k February 12, 2007 12:44 PM PST
I hope the City of Boston doesn't implement measures like this. There will be bomb scares all over the place.
Reply to this comment
China holds teh clue
by gggg sssss February 12, 2007 5:15 PM PST
Problem is that both CF and LEDs are / will be made mainly in China. So the entire investment in manufacturing, and resulting profits will accrue to the guys who are working on how to shoot down (our) satellites. A great opportunity to invest here, deal with labor costs realistically ( maybe Wal-Mart could get into the business) rather than exporting yet another technology base wholesale. Of course, the Kyoto wingnuts want to ignore the inconvenient truth that not only will we pay the Chinese to manufacture this stuff, we will also export "tonnes" of money in carbon credits for the pleasure. Where is Edison when you need him?
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