US Moves Towards Energy Efficient Light Bulbs

Great

news on the front page of the Saturday WSJ today: it looks very much as

though a nationwide energy-efficiency standard is going to come into force which

will essentially force every household in the country to move from incandescent

bulbs to light bulbs which are both much more environmentally friendly and,

over the medium term, much cheaper to run.

With 4 billion light sockets in the US, this is an opportunity for the likes

of GE and Phillips akin to the great move from vinyl to CD. The light bulb manufacturers

actually come out very well from this deal, because from now on much more of

the total cost of light bulbs is going to go on the bulbs themselves, rather

than on the energy needed to power them.

If the standard is agreed upon, that will give the manufacturers every incentive

to combine two important technologies, and create screw-in LED bulbs which are

also dimmable. The main

problem with compact fluorescents is that Americans don’t like the quality

of light they generate; this is being worked on. But the other big problem is

that they don’t work on dimmers – and even the new supposedly dimmable

ones don’t really work very well.

With LED bulbs, all that’s needed is a technology which reduces the number

of LEDs which light up when the bulb is dimmed. It’s not rocket science. Received

wisdom has it that LED bulbs are too expensive to appeal to the consumer market;

I say test it first. I’ll certainly buy them, if and when dimmable LED bulbs

come on the market.

This is just the first of what must be many steps towards changes which save

both energy and money. Such profitable ways of reducing carbon emissions are

the low-hanging fruit: let’s have many more!

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