Archive for August, 2009

Landmark European Lighting Legislation

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

EU phasing out traditional light bulbs

According to Businessgreen.com, to accomplish reducing CO2 emissions by one million tonnes a year by 2020, the recently passed Eco Design of Energy - using Products Directive restricts the manufacture and import of frosted incandescent light bulbs over the next three years before imposing a full ban in 2012. The legislation bans 100W light bulbs beginning September 1 and lower wattage bulbs one by one over the next three years.

Environment minister Dan Norris welcomed the introduction of the ban, predicting that it will help to accelerate the UK’s efforts to phase out inefficient light bulbs.

“We are glad the EU has put this measure in place to stop the waste of energy and money from old-fashioned, high-energy bulbs,” he said. “The UK has had a successful voluntary initiative in place for a few years, and now the rest of the EU will follow suit on a mandatory basis.”

Under a voluntary initiative, retailers in the UK have already begun to remove 150W and 100W bulbs from shelves and plan to remove all old-fashioned bulbs by 2011, a year ahead of the EU schedule. The government cites strong environmental and economic reasons for switching to more efficient bulbs including that traditional light bulbs waste 95 per cent of their energy as heat and that each CFL delivers annual energy bill savings of between £3 and £6 per lamp ($4.42 and$8.85).

What would be the reaction to similar legislation on this side of the pond?

A Penny Saved is TWENTY Earned

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

According to Energy Star for Healthcare, every dollar a non-profit health care organization saves on energy has the equivalent impact on the bottom line as increasing revenue by $20. For-profit hospitals can boost earnings per share by a penny if they reduce energy costs by 5 percent. Yet, the U.S. Department of Energy reports that 80% of existing commercial buildings operate lighting systems installed before 1986. Our Energy Savings Calculator will show you how much money you will save by replacing outdated lighting.

Schools Find Energy Savings in Lighting Retrofits

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

Environmentalleader.com reported today that educational facilities from colleges to grade schools are finding that they can achieve significant cost savings as well as reduce their carbon footprint [with] lighting retrofits (Source).

As an example, Olympic College in Washington state expects its power consumption to drop by more than 813,000 kilowatt hours per year, while reducing the school’s carbon emissions by 544 tons after it completes its lighting upgrade and retrofit at all three of its campuses. The school expects to offset more than half of the cost of the project through a $226,000 rebate from Puget Sound Energy (Aelux’s turnkey lighting solutions include managing rebate applications in all states where available. Any Aelux team member can assist you in identifying the rebates and financial incentives for which you qualify.) In addition, the school estimates a savings of nearly $5,000 per month in electricity costs on the three campuses.

The Olympic College project [includes] the replacement of current HID lights in parking lots with more efficient fluorescent bulbs. The school will also replace current 32-watt LED lights with smaller 28-watt bulbs, T-12 fluorescent bulbs with more efficient T-8s and use one of the newest technologies in the lighting industry, T-5 bulbs.

Taking energy-efficiency optimization one step further, the new Prairie Point Middle School and 9th Grade Academy in Cedar Rapids, Idaho, has installed a state-of-the-art energy management system and geothermal system. The energy management system will be programmed to shut down systems after hours to decrease unnecessary energy use. The school decreased electricity consumption by nearly 6%, saving more than 2,712,243 kWh of electricity each year. This translates into an estimated $191,172 in annual energy costs, energy efficiency rebates of $380,000, and avoidance of more than 1,948 metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions each year.

The first step to accomplish comparable savings is to schedule a no-cost audit with a qualified lighting retrofit partner. Qualified and experienced lighting professionals will also accomplish installations without any disruption to student schedules and learning.

How many lawmakers does it take to change a light bulb?

Monday, August 24th, 2009

The Los Angeles Times reported that the Federal Government paid $671,900 to a lighting consultant to come up with a system to both reduce the energy currently used to illuminate the capital dome and to celebrate the Capitol’s “unique identity” and “enliven the visual experience” of all those who view it. (Source).

The dome’s exterior currently is lighted by 38 1,000-watt metal halide lamps that were installed 20 years ago. The consultant recommended a retrofit of 128 lighting fixtures with new bulbs ranging from 35 watts to 210 watts providing a 70% reduction in energy use. Technology advances provide for the substantial energy reductions.

While both the energy and cost savings will be substantial, the 6-figure consulting cost is equivalent to the $600 toilet seats and $400 tools that used to dominate the headlines. Regardless of the size of the operation, a qualified lighting partner will provide turnkey services including a low- or no cost audit, professional installation and project management. A qualified lighting partner also provides all post-installation rebate and warranty administration.

Again, according to the LA Times, Jeff Ventura, a spokesman for the House chief administrative officer, said the lighting project had “far less to do with saving money in the short term on our energy bill . . . but has everything to do with setting a bold energy-saving example for the rest of the country.” Overspending on energy savings is not a bold example. Updating lighting with a qualified lighting partner reduces generally reduces power costs by 50% as well as cost-effectively setting a much bolder example than spending hundreds of thousands before saving a single kilowatt.

EASY Ways to Save Energy

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

The Building Owners & Managers Association (BOMA) calculates that asset value increases by $2.50 for every square foot of commercial property that reduces its energy consumption by just 10 percent, and published 30 simple ways to accomplish this. Their recommendations for lighting include:

Lighting can represent as much as 30 percent of a building’s energy usage, so changes to lighting can mean significant energy savings.

RELAMP
Even if you just re-lamped your buildings 3 years ago, take a lighting survey again. Lighting continuously gets more efficient. Converting to more efficient lamps and ballasts saves
total building energy.

DE-LAMP and DISCONNECT UNUSED BALLASTS
Many buildings are just too bright. If de-lamping
opportunities exist, you may be able to go from 4 lamps in perimeter down to 2 lamps and from
4 lamps to 3 lamps in interior spaces. Also be sure to have unused ballasts identified and disconnected.

SEE IF ANYONE IS LEAVING LIGHTS ON
Periodically, stay at work late or drive past after hours to identify additional opportunities for energy savings. Pay attention to exterior lighting as well.

INSTALL OCCUPANCY SENSORS
Install occupancy sensors to automatically turn off lights when physical movement stops. This
strategy may be especially effective in spaces that are used infrequently, such as storerooms and conference rooms. Occupancy sensors work not just for lights but also for HVAC controls.

USE HIGH EFFICIENCY LED EXIT SIGNS
Replace inefficient exit signs with high efficiency LED exit signs. LED exit signs operate 24/7 and
have lower maintenance costs due to their extended life.

AELUX welcomes companies to contact any Aelux team member for a no-cost lighting audit that addresses each of the above issues and more! BOMA’s complete list of recommendations is posted here.

“Will America lose the clean-energy race?”

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

Teryn Norris and Jesse Jenkins are Project Director and Director of Energy & Climate Policy at the Breakthrough Institute. They are co-authors of the National Energy Education Act proposal and warn that America faces a new global competition that will have far greater implications for the future of our nation and the world: the clean energy race.

While Congress debates climate and energy legislation, Asian challengers are moving rapidly to win the clean energy race. China alone is reportedly investing $440-660 billion in its clean energy industries over 10 years. South Korea is investing a full two percent of its GDP in a “Green New Deal” to expand their share in cleantech markets. And Japan is redoubling direct incentives for solar power, aiming for a 20-fold expansion in installed solar energy by 2020.

In contrast, the United States would invest only about $1.2 billion annually in energy research and development and roughly $10 billion in the clean energy sector as a whole under the Waxman-Markey bill — less than 0.1 percent of U.S. GDP. This funding level is so low that a group of 34 Nobel Laureates recently submitted a letter to President Obama decrying the lack of investment and calling on the president to uphold his promise to invest $15 billion annually in clean energy R&D — fifteen times the current level in Waxman-Markey.

The U.S. is not only investing far less in our clean energy industries than Asian nations, but also falling behind in energy science and technology education. Only 15 percent of undergraduate degrees earned in the U.S. each year are in science, technology, math, and engineering (STEM) areas compared to 50 percent in China, according to the National Science Foundation — all at a time when nearly half of our current energy workforce is expected to retire over the next decade.

This spring, the Obama administration proposed an initiative designed to bridge this dangerous energy education gap by inspiring and educating thousands of young Americans to pursue careers in clean energy. The program, called RE-ENERGYSE (REgaining our ENERGY Science and Engineering Edge), would fund new undergraduate and graduate energy curriculum and train up to 8,500 highly educated young scientists and engineers in the clean energy field by 2015 alone. Technical training and K-12 funding would support hundreds of programs nationwide to train thousands more technically skilled clean energy workers.

As President Obama announced in April, “The nation that leads the world in 21st century clean energy will be the nation that leads in the 21st century global economy… [RE-ENERGYSE] will prepare a generation of Americans to meet this generational challenge.”

Unfortunately, the U.S. Senate and House recently rejected the Obama administration’s energy education proposal, with the Senate cutting the program from $115 million to $0 and the House appropriating only $7 million.

If the U.S. had responded to the Soviet launch of Sputnik the way today’s Congress is responding to the Asian energy challenge, America would not only have lost the space race, we would have been left behind in the technologies and industries that fueled a half-century of economic progress.
Indeed, the U.S. simply could not have won the space race without major federal investments in targeted education programs. Spurred on by the Soviet launch of Sputnik, Congress passed the National Defense Education Act in 1958, committing billions of dollars to equip a generation to confront the Soviet challenge. These investments developed the human capital necessary to put a man on the moon and invent the technologies that catapulted our world into the Information Age, from microchips and telecommunications to personal computing and the Internet.

Last week, a group of over 100 universities, student groups, and professional associations submitted a letter to each member of the Senate urging full support of RE-ENERGYSE. “America is in danger of losing its global competitiveness and the clean energy race without substantial new investments in science, technology, math, and engineering education,” they wrote. “RE-ENERGYSE… will train America’s future energy workforce, accelerate our transition to a prosperous clean energy economy, and ensure that we lead the world’s burgeoning clean technology industries.”

To win today’s clean-energy race, the United States must respond with the same vigorous commitment to education and innovation that won the space race four decades ago. Congress should begin by strengthening RE-ENERGYSE to the full $115 million requested and pass energy legislation that invests $30 billion to $50 billion annually in low-carbon energy, including the $15 billion in energy R&D called for by our nation’s top scientists.

If America does not take immediate action to bridge its energy education gap — and if we fail to make substantially larger investments in our own clean energy economy — we will effectively cede the clean energy race to Asia. Forty years from today, we may still find the burgeoning clean energy economy promised by President Obama and Democratic leaders. It will simply be headquartered in China.

Notes from Aelux: We have both internal and external education programs in place including our newsletter, blog and presentations we provide.

website design and development by Allgood Creative Media, LLC built using xhtml and css standards