Saving American Families and Businesses Money through Lighting Efficiency
Today, the Department of Energy released a new proposed efficiency
rule for General Service Lamps, better known as lightbulbs. This
proposed rule will make it easier for consumers to make cost-effective,
energy efficient choices for lighting their homes and offices. This
proposal marks the next step of a public process that has been underway
for more than two years and will continue over the course of this
year.
The Department of Energy’s efficiency proposal is keeping pace with
changes in lighting technology. In order to meet existing standards,
traditional lightbulbs – like halogen, compact fluorescent lights– would
likely be replaced in the market place with cutting edge LED
technology. This transition aligns with changes that are already
happening in industry and throughout the market. You can find more
about the rule and the story behind the process here.
The changes that we are seeing in the lighting market make sense.
Incandescent light bulb technology is more than 130 years old. Relying
on antiquated technology, these light bulbs lose a huge amount of energy
in wasted heat. Some models contain trace amounts of mercury.
Even though the price tag for an incandescent bulb in the store might
seem like a good deal, outdated lights end up costing consumers more
money in higher electric bills in the long run. A mother that installs a
LED light when her child is born won’t need to change the bulb until
after her kid graduates from college.
For every LED light she might use, she’d have to buy 25
incandescents. She would spend $129 for electricity using a traditional
bulb available for purchase today vs. $25.50 for a comparative LED. The
lower price over the long run is part of the reason that more and more
people have been using LEDs. From 2012 to 2014, total installations of
common home LED bulbs increased six-fold from 13 million to 78 million –
growth enabled by the nearly 90% reduction in cost since 2008.
Today’s top-performing LEDs consume 80% less energy than traditional
incandescent bulbs available for purchase today. Just a few years ago, a
single LED could cost as much as $100. Thanks to developments in
technology, LED prices continue to plummet, rapidly making them
competitive with traditional technologies. Today, you can find an
equivalent 60-watt LED for under $5 in stores across the country.
Because of superior performance and cost savings, some have projected
LEDs to reach over 80 percent of all lighting sales by 2030. That’s the
equivalent of $26 billion per year in electricity costs while cutting
America’s lighting electricity use by nearly half.
Aside from the cost savings, consumers who will be making the shift
to LED lighting are also helping to move us closer to our climate goals.
In 2014 alone, LED installations prevented 7.1 million metric tons of
CO2 emissions and saved $1.4 billion in energy costs. Through 2030, the
cumulative reduction in CO2 emissions due to the standards proposed
today is the equivalent of emissions resulting from the annual
electricity use of 1.3 million homes.
We look forward to the year ahead, which will move us closer to
achieving significant consumer savings and advancing our climate goals
through the efficiency standards. The Department of Energy has been
working with LED Technology for more than a decade, and the Building
Technologies Office is already working with manufacturers to accelerate
the range of lighting LED options available to consumers ahead of
January 1, 2020, when this proposed rule would go into effect. In the
meantime, DOE will continue to work with industry to see what more we
can do to support energy efficient lighting while maintain consumer
choices that are good for our environment, our budgets and our nation.
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