Eco Friendly LED Lighting Comes of Age in the New Green Economy
LED lighting technology opens the door to the first truly "super-efficient, cost-effective" lighting solutions for commercial, institutional, and residential applications. The newest generation of LED bulbs have been designed to use the same lighting fixtures as incandescent and compact fluorescent bulbs. In the case of standard fluorescent bulbs the installer needs to cut the ballast wire as it is not utilized with the LED replacement bulbs. An added bonus to this generation of LED bulbs is that, in most cases, they are dimmable, unlike many of the bulbs they are designed to replace.
An industry insider who did not wish to be identified said “For the
first time, this type of LED bulb offers dramatic energy savings at a
sensible cost, which will enable rapid customer payback and ongoing
energy savings. We anticipate very high customer interest and
significant demand, especially in the retail and hospitality
industries. This is particularly true when businesses realize the
substantial additional savings of 90% or more in labor costs associated
with frequent changing of incandescent bulbs."
The new LED bulbs have many of the usual advantages of solid-state
lighting technology, such as low power consumption (the bulbs consume
as little as 3.0-5.6 watts), robustness (they have a polycarbonate
housing) and a long service utilization life (claimed to be
50,000-100,000 hours).
The key appears to be in the thermal
dissipation technology being employed in the new LED bulbs that
significantly reduces heat generated by the bulb, leading to cooler
operation and longer life. Also, by utilizing the new smaller,
brighter LEDs packed in the same area, the bulb produces more light
without increasing the size of the bulb package. This produces a bulb
with superior light quality and consistency while producing up to 30%
greater light output per LED which translates to fewer LEDs per bulb;
and since LEDs account for the majority of a bulb's cost, this
translates into a lower cost per bulb.
The newer bulbs also seem to have resolved the problem of color shift
over time (caused, for example, when phosphors degrade in white LEDs)
by using red, green and blue chips in the bulbs.
Looking at the ROI –
Return on Investment comparisons between standard incandescent R-30
floodlights and the new LEDs generates a startling set of numbers…
The standard incandescent R-30 costs about $3.50 per bulb and lasts about 2,000 hours. The new LED replacement costs about $35 but lasts between 50,000-100,000 hours.
Using the 50,000 LED life, to equal one LED bulb, a customer would have
to purchase 25 incandescent bulbs for $87.50 (versus one LED bulb for
$35).
When you factor in the additional labor of replacing the 25
incandescent bulbs the savings becomes potentially astronomical. In a
commercial or an institutional location, the cost of labor to change a
light bulb must be factored into the total cost comparison. A 300-room
hotel using LED bulbs could save as much as $60,000 annually in costs
for light bulbs, electricity, and labor.
Looking at the energy efficiencies generates similar savings…
A series of incandescent bulbs delivering a total of 50,000 hours of
use would cost $276 to operate at a cost of $0.085 per kilowatt-hour
for the electricity.
One LED bulb would use only $28 of electricity over the same period, a saving of almost 90%.
LED bulbs are available today in almost any existing bulb design or
configuration. They emit a variety of temperatures in the warm to
bright white light or amber light for indoor or outdoor use, sometimes
found in facilities such as parking garages. Incandescent and
fluorescent bulbs may be tinted yellow or amber, but they still emit
light outside the desired color range.
CFL vs. LED
It is interesting to note that CFL (compact fluorescent light) offers a
10x savings on energy over standard bulbs, which is good, but
characteristically they do not dim well. LED bulbs offer a 10X over
CFL and typically 25X over standard incandescent bulbs (without the
dimming problems).
With the mercury in florescent lighting, LEDs are an environmentally
obvious choice. A 25 Watt CFL is equal to a 100 Watt incandescent while
a 16 Watt LED will produce the same light output. A CFL lasts 10 times
as long as an incandescent, but an LED will last 100 times as long.
The Bottom Line
As with most business decisions even the green we spend to green the
planet often comes down to the bottom line. In these tough economic
times, people need to see that the ROI is so compelling that the
savings alone make the decision a no-brainer. Saving the planet is a
bonus we all get to enjoy.
Editors note: Howard Lubert is the Managing Partner and Senior Analyst of SafeHatch
LLC, a technology consulting firm in Wayne, PA that works with the
private equity community and startup technology companies. He is so
enamored with this concept he has taken an Executive Director position
with a Philadelphia area company called GreenandSave, LLC which
specializes in this type of green energy savings programs.
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