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2014年2月15日星期六

Incandescent, LED, CFL, Halogen light bulbs comparison - Which Really Save You Money

Lighting typically accounts for about 20-30% of your electric bill. Incandescent, LED, CFL, Halogen light bulbs, which do you use? Here is the comparison of the 4 types light bulbs. Let’s see which will really save you money.


Lighting typically accounts for about 20-30% of your electric bill. Incandescent, LED, CFL, Halogen light bulbs, which do you use? Here is the comparison of the 4 types light bulbs. Let’s see which will really save you money.


You’re familiar with the situation. You go to the store to replace a couple light bulbs that burnt out and you’re faced with an entire aisle of options: incandescents, LEDs, CFLs, halogens. Which one do you buy? There are many factors that will influence your decision, but you’ll probably go for the one that will offer the best economic value. You’ve heard that the most expensive ones will last longer and use less energy, but it’s important to consider all of your options. Will you really save money paying $25 for a light bulb?


incandescent-led-cfl-halogen-light-bulbs-comparison incandescent-led-cfl-halogen-light-bulbs-comparison


It’s true. The cheap incandescent bulbs are very inefficient since most of the energy they consume ends up being used for heat instead of light. For this reason, these bulbs are in the process of being phased out. Just this past month, the 40-watt and 60-watt bulbs have been banned from production, though you can probably still find them in stock at certain retail locations if you search hard enough. So you can either stock up on these ancient bulbs or get with the times and choose a more efficient option.


Lighting typically accounts for about 20-30% of your electric bill so you want to make a wise choice when it comes to which bulb to use. Below you will find a cost comparison of four different types of light bulbs; all emit the same amount of light, but vary in initial cost and the amount of energy consumed.


Comparing the electricity cost for one year, you’ll see that you could save about $10 by switching from incandescent to LED. Now that doesn’t seem like much, but once you increase the timeframe to 15 years, and factor in how many bulbs you’ll need during that time, you will notice that an incandescent will cost you almost four times as much as an LED.


Judging by this number, you decide against the incandescent. Halogen light bulbs have a longer lifespan, but between their high initial cost and their inability to save much energy, they’re out too.


Now you’re down to CFLs and LEDs. An LED bulb will last about three times longer than a CFL and will require less energy, but its current astronomical price tag will pretty much negate all of its economic benefits.


Any one of these three light bulbs is a better option than the incandescent, but until the price of LED bulbs becomes more reasonable, it’s best to stick with CFLs.


If you’re finding it difficult to make the switch, think back to the humorous Cree commercial that gave it to you straight. “The light bulbs in your house were invented by Thomas Edison in 1879. Now think about that with your twenty-thirteen brain. Do you still do the wash down at the creek while your eldest son stands lookout for wolves?”


It’s time for you to break your old fashioned trend, just don’t break the bank in the process.



Incandescent, LED, CFL, Halogen light bulbs comparison - Which Really Save You Money

2014年2月11日星期二

When (and Where) Solar LED Lighting Makes Sense

Right now, very few businesses or real estate development companies would think first about using solar panels to run their outdoor lights, but in places where’s no established cabling, solar lights really can make sense from an economic and efficiency standpoint. And I’m not just talking about in emerging nations.


Right now, very few businesses or real estate development companies would think first about using solar panels to run their outdoor lights, but in places where’s no established cabling, solar lights really can make sense from an economic and efficiency standpoint. And I’m not just talking about in emerging nations.


In the past six months, I’ve spoken with two companies that are pioneering the commercial market for these applications (the residential market is a separate animal): Sol Lighting, a Palm City, Fla.-based company that specializes in outdoor LED lighting technology; and Clear Blue Technologies, a Toronto-based maker of lighting controls and other smart grid components that is testing the viability of off-grid solar and wind-powered lights.


The size of the overall commercial outdoor lighting market is estimated at $11 billion. Within that, there’s a pronounced shift to LED technologies. In 2012, for example, 54 percent of the 2 million luminaires installed along roadways and tunnels around the world were LED format, reports Strategies Unlimited in its January 2014 report on outdoor area and street lighting. Another forecast from Navigant Research predicts shipments of smart, LED-based street lights will top 17 million by 2020.


No one appears to have cooked up a reliable separate market forecast for the niche solar sector, but Sol in particular, has made its presence felt globally over its roughly 20 years of existence. As of November 2013, it had installed more than 60,000 systems in 60 different countries, representing more than 10 megawatts of solar capacity. (That’s about 840,000 square feet of solar panels and enough lights to illuminate a nine square-mile parking lot.)


“The $11 billion-plus commercial outdoor lighting market is experiencing a solar and LED renaissance,” said Dibs Tailor, president and CEO of Sol Lighting, in a statement. “This 10 megawatt milestone confirms our leadership in this space and is a testament to our superior design, manufacturing and technology capabilities. By carefully integrating cutting-edge photovoltaic, LED and battery storage technologies into high-quality outdoor lighting products, we have made solar lighting very cost-effective and even more reliable.”


When I spoke with Tailor, he said roadway lighting such as the company’s 20/20, 10/10 and Greenway systems account for the vast majority of sales, although Sol sells integrated systems for bus stops, transit shelters, signs and emergency response.


In the United States, Sol is winning deals related to new construction projects, where there is little or no existing lighting infrastructure. Two examples include the Los Angeles County Arboretum, which couldn’t install grid-tied lights because of concerns over root systems across its 127-acre grounds; and the Top Gun Flight School in Fallon, Nev., which put them near aircraft fueling stations and power sub-stations. In both cases, the installations were meant to improve security. A third installation, this one for 146 systems, helped a swap meet business in Las Vegas add night-time events quickly while avoiding major new construction.


Sol’s technology was also used by Premier Homes in Richmond, Va., to add 21 lighting poles throughout a 40-home residential development.


Solar-LED-street-lights Added as an afterthought, these solar lights in Richmond cut installation costs in half for the developer.


The lights were actually an afterthought, one that didn’t emerge until after all the wiring and cabling for other utilities had already been buried, said Sean Bowers, chief operating officer for Premiere. “People were leaving lights on to brighten up the alleys,” he said.


Together with the city, the developer determined that solar lighting was a far more cost-effective way to put in lights than the traditional alternative: a savings of nearly $600,000 for the installation, not to mention the ongoing electricity cots, Bowers said. “It wasn’t very hard to learn how to work with these things,” he added.


So far, the installation has survived two hurricanes with no issue, and Premiere plans to use the same lights in another Richmond housing development, Bowers said.


It’s not realistic to expect solar lighting to become the norm for retrofits for years – if you take out the installation concerns, it’s tough to make the cost argument. But increasingly, the technology will find traction in locations where safety and grid infrastructure are of equal concern.


Aside from Sol and Clear Blue, some of the other companies with a particular focus on developing this emerging market include Solar Street Lights USA, OkSolar.com, Solar Lighting International, Solar Electric Power Co., and Silicon Solar.



When (and Where) Solar LED Lighting Makes Sense

2014年1月22日星期三

LED Lights Set To Upgrade Detroit’s Neighborhoods

The Public Lighting Authority of Detroit has been installing new street lights in two demonstration areas of the city since the beginning of November. As we have installed the new lights we have continued to evaluate lessons learned within the demonstration area.


Public Lighting Authority of Detroit Executive Director Odis Jones Public Lighting Authority of Detroit Executive Director Odis Jones


Public Lighting Authority of Detroit Executive Director Odis Jones Tuesday issued the following statement:


The Public Lighting Authority of Detroit has been installing new street lights in two demonstration areas of the city since the beginning of November. As we have installed the new lights we have continued to evaluate lessons learned within the demonstration area.


One option we have explored is to discontinue the use of traditional High Pressure Sodium lights in favor of more modern LED (Light-Emitting Diode) lights. After considerable research, and in consultation with Mayor Mike Duggan, I have decided that LED lights will provide brighter and more cost efficient lighting for the city. As a result, I will present a plan to the newly appointed PLA board to install all LED street lights in the remainder of the demonstration areas as well as in the rest of the city. This plan will be presented to the board at its first meeting Wednesday, January 29th.


In addition, I will recommend doubling the pace of the installation of new lights within neighborhoods so that it will be completed in 18 months, rather than the current schedule of three years.

In the meantime, in the period between now and the board meeting, the crews that have been installing lights will be carrying out general repair work that is required.



LED Lights Set To Upgrade Detroit’s Neighborhoods

2014年1月20日星期一

How to Buy a New Energy-Efficient LED Light Bulb

Instead of going to the store and grabbing an incandescent off the shelf, you now have several options when shopping for light bulbs.


energy-efficient-LED-lighting energy-efficient-LED-lighting


Instead of going to the store and grabbing an incandescent off the shelf, you now have several options when shopping for light bulbs.


You may have heard by now: the classic incandescent light bulb is on its way out. Because incandescent light bulbs are some of the least efficient on the market—wasting up to 90% of electricity as heat instead of light—they are being phased out of production and what’s on the shelves and in warehouses now is all that’s left.


The changes are due to the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007, which requires new light bulbs to be more energy efficient than the bulbs we are used to buying. 100-watt and 75-watt traditional incandescent bulbs were retired in 2012 and 2013, respectively, and, starting this year, 60-watt bulbs and 40-watt bulbs are also required to meet new efficiency standards.


To be clear, only “standard” bulbs need to meet the new requirements. Plenty of bulbs are exempt from the new standards—including appliance lamps, rough service bulbs, 3-way bulbs, colored lamps, stage lighting, plant lights, candelabra lights under 60 watts, and outdoor post lights less than 100 watts.


What that means, though, is that soon, when you’re looking for a new light bulb, your options on store shelves are going to be a little different.


What are my light bulb options?


Instead of going to the store and grabbing an incandescent off the shelf, you now have several options when shopping for light bulbs:




  • Energy-saving incandescents (halogen): These lower wattage incandescent bulbs have a tungsten filament like standard bulbs, but are surrounded by a halogen gas, rather than argon or nitrogen, to provide bright light with better efficiency. These are 25% more efficient than traditional incandescent bulbs and will last three times as long.


  • Compact fluorescents (CFLs): You’ve probably seen these curly, bulb-sized fluorescents on sale. Though early versions tended to offer harsh light, new bulbs have more color options and are even styled to look like traditional incandescent bulbs. These bulbs offer 75% energy savings over an incandescent and last ten times as long.


  • LEDs: The most efficient option, LED bulbs are 75-80% more efficient than traditional incandescents and last 25 times longer.



How much will I save with the new light bulbs?


All of these bulbs will cost more than a traditional incandescent bulb—halogen incandescents being the least expensive and LEDs being the most expensive—but the energy savings will add up over time. The U.S. Department of Energy estimates you’ll save $6 a year for each incandescent you upgrade to a CFL—and the savings only grow over time, since these bulbs all last significantly longer and won’t require replacing as often as a standard incandescent. If you replace 15 bulbs in your house, expect to save $50 in energy costs every year—and on top of that, you won’t have to buy light bulbs nearly as often.


So long as you buy Energy Star certified light bulbs, which are tested to meet specific efficiency standards, you’re guaranteed savings with these bulbs—even though you’ll spend more up front. Want to know exactly how much a bulb is going to cost you? Check out the label, which should tell you how much it will cost to use for a year as well as how long it will last.


What about the light quality of these bulbs?


If you’re looking to replace specific bulbs in your household, you’re probably used to picking up a bulb that’s 60-watt, 75-watt, or the like—but these measurements, based on how much energy the bulb used, are not an accurate way to tell how much light the bulbs produce.


Instead look at the “lumens” which is a measure of how much light a bulb produces before you buy it. Here’s a cheat sheet:



  • If you used to buy 100 watt bulbs, look for a bulb with 1600 lumens.

  • If you used to buy 75 watt bulbs, look for a bulb with 1100 lumens.

  • If you used to buy 60 watt bulbs, look for a bulb with 800 lumens.

  • If you used to buy 40 watt bulbs, look for a bulb with 450 lumens.


Another new option you’ll see is color temperature. Because few people are fond of the harshness of fluorescent lights, most CFLs now come in colors designed to mimic the warmth of an incandescent bulb. Color is measured in Kelvins, ranging from 2,700 K (the warm light of typical incadescents) up to around 5,500 K (proving a daylight or natural tone). Though all of these bulbs produce white light, warmer lights will have a more yellow tint—better for bedrooms and other soft lighting conditions—while cooler lights will have a blue tint—better for reading. Check the packaging to see what kind of light a bulb produces before you buy—and if you’re not sure what colors you want, go to your local hardware store to see different lights on display.


Are new bulbs safe?


It’s true: compact fluorescent lights have a small amount of mercury inside. In standard use, the mercury stays inside the bulb and there’s no risk. However, if you break a bulb, you’ll want to take care to clean it up following these instructions from the EPA. But don’t be too alarmed: according to the EPA, CFLs contain a very small amount of mercury—less than 1/100th of the amount in a mercury thermometer.


When your bulb has burned out, you should recycle it to prevent that mercury from winding up in a landfill. Your city or waste collection provider may offer recycling services, but many major retailers also accept CFLs for recycling. Home Depot, Lowes, IKEA, Ace Hardware, and True Value will all recycle bulbs—just check with your retailer when you buy your bulb to see what to do.



How to Buy a New Energy-Efficient LED Light Bulb

2014年1月16日星期四

Will local councils see the light on LED technology?

LED street lights can cut energy bills, reduce carbon emissions, be operated remotely and linked to smart technology. Councils should take note


Shanghai gears up for green lighting UK councils need to follow the example set by cities such as Shanghai, where LED lighting illuminates the elevated highways. Photograph: Imaginechina/Corbis


Visitors to the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow this summer will find a city transformed by the £0.5bn poured into new sporting venues and beefing up the city’s infrastructure.


But there is an even more fundamental transformation under way in Scotland’s biggest city. By next summer, it will be firmly on track to becoming a world-leading “smart” city, having won £25m from the government’s Technology Strategy Board to show how a city can use cutting-edge digital and wireless technology to provide services such as roads, security and lighting to its citizens more efficiently, while cutting CO2 emissions.


And lighting is one of three key areas where Glasgow is trying to shine as a smart city. In November, the council announced that by next summer the sulphurous orange glow of 10,000 sodium street lights will be replaced with the crisp white light of light-emitting diodes (LEDs) and compact fluorescent bulbs, cutting the city’s energy and maintenance bills.


But the really smart bit is that Glasgow will test the way LED lights, unlike their technological predecessors, can be equipped with digital sensors allowing them to be controlled remotely, and to respond to changes in the local environment, such as an increase in traffic. Such intelligent controls can push the average energy savings with LED lighting from 50% to 70%, according to the European commission.


Yet a recent roundtable discussion on the future of lighting in cities – hosted by the Guardian in association with GE Lighting – heard that only 10% of new public streetlights are LED based. So what is preventing LEDs from being installed in every house, skyscraper and city street? How do you flick the switch on the LED revolution?


Ben Ferrari, director of corporate relationships for the Climate Group, a not-for-profit organisation working globally with governments and business on the green economy, told the workshop that LED could be a critical weapon against climate change, as lighting accounts for almost 20% of global electricity use. At the recent UN climate conference in Warsaw, the Climate Group renewed its call for all new public lighting globally to be LED by 2020.


“If we are facing peak emissions this decade, scale for LED isn’t just desirable,” Ferrari said. “We have to get where we are going, and we have to get there quickly.”


Energy savings


The roundtable – which included representatives from industry, law, environmental groups and government-funded bodies – agreed that the technology is now ripe for take-off. One of the biggest barriers to LED competing in the market for general lighting has been high cost. But research from management consultancy McKinsey shows that costs are dropping 30% a year. And efficiency rates and life-spans are going just as quickly in the opposite direction, so that by 2020 the energy saving compared to today’s conventional lighting is expected to reach 90%.


Guardian executive editor Jo Confino, who chaired the discussion, asked if the technology is changing too quickly, making councils reluctant to invest in what is effectively a moving target.


Ronald Hendrikx, partner at Bird & Bird, a law firm that is working with the Department of Energy & Climate Change on the roll-out of smart meters, said that with the rapid growth of companies in the sector, “the amount of choice available is baffling. You don’t know where to stop or start.” Falling costs are also an excuse for cities to put off a decision.


But Iain Watson, director of energy efficiency for the Green Investment Bank (GIB), said the savings in energy and maintenance costs that councils can make by acting today are already so substantial that delay no longer makes financial sense.


Although Glasgow’s decision to replace its street lights was independent of the smart city funding, the money will be used for pilot projects that pair LED lighting on a stretch of road with smart controls and wireless technology, enabling city planners to monitor traffic, air quality, congestion and noise levels, and respond accordingly.


The LED replacement is a simpler proposition. It costs Glasgow £8.5m a year to power and repair its ageing light network. Since the new lamps are expected to use less than half the energy of the old ones, and last three to seven times longer, the council said the £9m investment in LEDs will be quickly recouped.


Strategic thinking


But recognising the savings requires strategic thinking at a high level, Watson said. “The feeling from the GIB is that we are on the cusp of local authorities understanding the technologies, but you need a visionary to drive forward support for it, because it doesn’t sit in any one team. It needs to get up to the chief executive level to see the benefits, because it is not just the kit that you buy, but the savings you are going to get from it over the long term.”


Dan Palmer, head of market development for the British Standards Institution (BSI), agrees.


“A lot of technology works and could be deployed by cities, but the city isn’t able to act as an intelligent customer,” Palmer said. He added that cities are also unaccustomed to working in partnerships with companies in smart city projects and at a level that spans different departments. “There isn’t a single person whose responsibility it is.”


To overcome this, the BSI was asked by the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills to come up with smart city guidelines and standards, and it has been working to share the experience of Glasgow and its industry partners with other councils. The first standard will be published next month.


Ersel Oymak, innovations technology manager at Cisco Systems, which is working on Glasgow’s smart city initiative, said one way to sell LED lighting to cities is to focus on its potential to have social benefits that extend far beyond lighting, if used intelligently. Studies have shown that patients in hospital recover better and students achieve more in school if exposed to lighting conditions that adapt to their needs. “We need to raise awareness in local authorities so that they grasp this is the sustainable and strategic thing to do,” Oymak said.


But Agostino Renna, chief executive officer of GE Lighting, said in his experience few cities are capable of such strategic thinking. And the focus on ever-smarter technology runs the risk of putting them off simpler solutions, such as LED replacement.


“I am convinced the answer isn’t more technology,” he said. “I’m a big fan of evolution instead of revolution. Small things that work well, done repeatedly by a lot of people, can make a big difference.”


Several participants called for technology companies to focus less on technology and more on innovative business models that will remove the upfront costs of LED lighting from hard-pressed UK councils facing budget cuts. Bulen Hourshid, director of value engineering at consultancy Aecom, said: “Local authorities have an annual budget. Green technology is all about getting investment back over time. But councils don’t want to invest in something that won’t give them payback within two to three years.”


Dax Lovegrove, head of business engagement at WWF, said one answer could be performance contracts. He pointed to the success of SolarCity in the US, which has cornered the US solar panel market in a few short years by selling solar energy as a service, with no upfront cost to customers to buy and install the solar panels. SolarCity’s customers sign a contract agreeing to pay a monthly fee for electricity that is cheaper than they would pay to their local utility. Financing comes from banks, which get a return for the life of the contract.


John Raspin, partner in the energy and environment group at legal firm Frost & Sullivan, said such performance contracts could be the way of the future. “There needs to be a fundamental thinking shift, from selling a product or solution to selling an outcome.”


Several participants lamented the lack of political will to tackle energy efficiency, with cash-strapped councils neglecting their climate-change targets and the UK government considering scrapping green levies and reviewing its targets for cutting CO2 emissions.


In Brussels, European legislators, who boosted the LED industry by imposing a phased ban on incandescent bulbs, are debating setting binding targets for energy-efficiency savings by 2030, a move that would be another huge fillip to the industry. But Ferrari said strong opposition from business lobby groups could scupper these efforts unless progressive companies champion the cause.


Like GE’s Renna, he thinks the push for LED shouldn’t be mixed up with the drive for smart cities, which will take many years to bear fruit. “The message to cities is don’t wait. There are lots of practical solutions you can do now,” Ferrari said. “They don’t prevent a smart future, but they don’t wait for it, either.”



Will local councils see the light on LED technology?

2014年1月15日星期三

Cree LED lighting arrives at Munich Airport

LED lighting solutions developer Cree, Durham, NC, USA, is supplying its LED technology to power the apron and exterior lighting systems of Munich Airport, Germany (“FMG”), one of Europe’s largest international hubs, serving 38 million passengers per year.


cree-led-lighting-arrives-at-munich-airport cree-led-lighting-arrives-at-munich-airport


LED lighting solutions developer Cree, Durham, NC, USA, is supplying its LED technology to power the apron and exterior lighting systems of Munich Airport, Germany (“FMG”), one of Europe’s largest international hubs, serving 38 million passengers per year.


Cree collaborated with Ewo, Cortaccia, Italy, a manufacturer of lighting systems designed for public areas, whose F32 flood lights are replacing high-pressure sodium lamps in Munich Airport’s high-mast systems. The F32 was designed to integrate into the existing apron lighting at Munich Airport, and each light is illuminated by up to 288 Cree XLamp XT-E LEDs.


Munich Airport had sought out LED technology to reduce the operating cost of its more than 13,000 outdoor lights. In addition to energy savings, the airport has set itself the goal of maintaining CO2 emissions at their 2005 level – irrespective of future traffic growth.


The airport expects the new flood lights featuring Cree LEDs to consume at least 50 percent less energy than the previously-installed high-pressure sodium lamps, which would result in yearly electricity savings of 122,000 kilowatt-hours and approximately 70 tons of CO2 on completion of phase one of the lighting overhaul.


Through longer-term replacement of its 3,000 apron floodlights and 10,200 exterior lights, the airport expects to save more than 5,000 tons of CO2 annually. Cree says that by their use of energy- and cost-efficient LED technology, the brilliant white light emitted by the F32 floodlight gives a higher color rendering value to more accurately display colors and provide enhanced visibility compared to the old lamps.


cree-led-lighting-arrives-at-munich-airport cree-led-lighting-arrives-at-munich-airport


Refit will save more than 5,000t of CO2 annually.


The importance of airport lighting to the safe management of air traffic cannot be overstated. “Assuring the safety of our passengers, planes and their crew, airport staff and any other visitor is a priority at Munich Airport,” said Günther Sellmeier, planning and project manager for exterior lighting, engineering and facilities, at FMG.


Cree technology is providing lighting for more than just the apron: all implemented floodlights can be universally equipped with a variety of optical lenses and the Ewo Light Management System for additional flexibility, allowing the technology to be adapted to various different situations. One version has been designed especially for airport street lighting to ensure that surrounding roadways are also optimally lit.



Cree LED lighting arrives at Munich Airport

2013年12月30日星期一

Refocus design challenges to move LED lighting forward

At the recent 2013 Solid-State Lighting (SSL) Manufacturing R&D Workshop organized by the US Department of Energy (DOE), I called upon the DOE to sponsor R&D competitions with the intent of discovering new sustainable materials and fabrication methods. Innovations in sustainable design...


challenge

At the recent 2013 Solid-State Lighting (SSL) Manufacturing R&D Workshop organized by the US Department of Energy (DOE), I called upon the DOE to sponsor R&D competitions with the intent of discovering new sustainable materials and fabrication methods. Innovations in sustainable design may lead the lighting industry to achieve radical cost reductions not possible with our current technology paradigms.


I proposed two possible R+D challenges similar in spirit to the L Prize program. The first challenge is to design a complete luminaire — from electrons to photons — to meet a stringent life-cycle analysis such as the Cradle-to-Cradle Certification program. Such an “L Prize LifeCycle” award would stimulate entrants to reduce toxicity, design for end-of-life repurposing, and to reduce supply chain complexity. The second challenge is to generate the most lumen output from the least mass, normalized against output, efficacy, and other performance requirements. Such an “L Prize FeatherWeight” award would dare entrants to reduce material consumption, fixture size and complexity, and secondary transport and handling costs.


Notice that all the benefits listed above from these sustainable R&D challenges lead to cost savings. The notion that sustainable design can lead to significant cost reductions is counterintuitive for many, because most manufacturers tasked with greening their products usually start with their existing product lines, which are rooted in decades of decidedly non-sustainable design, materials, and assembly methods. This situation has only become worse with the transition to digital lighting products. LED lighting has been piggy-backing on the technical paradigms of the consumer electronics industry, such as FR4 printed circuit boards and surface-mount technology (SMT) assembly. This synergy leads to a scale and style of manufacturing better suited for producing cheap audio players than for supplying the robust and messy needs of building construction sites.


Moreover, this reliance on the consumer electronics industry has unfortunately sent large percentages of SSL manufacturing straight to Asia. Stimulating local manufacturing, especially in support of the construction industry, should be straightforward. Anybody who’s been on a construction site knows that fragile electronics with 16-week global lead times are exactly the opposite of what construction managers need from their suppliers.


While the lighting industry has spent the last decade coming to grips with the disruptions caused by LED lighting, the architecture and construction industries have experienced their own disruptions. Building information modeling, parametric design, digital fabrication, and aggressive environmental certification programs have shifted building construction to a heavily mass-customized approach with the use of more bio-friendly materials. The current paradigm of PCB-based LED electronics seems a poor long-term fit with these macro industry trends, which leads to the question: Is the lighting industry developing the technologies needed to support these advances in the construction fields?


Competitions like the proposed “LifeCycle” or “FeatherWeight” challenges will broaden the perspectives of the modern lighting industry and perhaps introduce radical new methods of fabricating lighting systems — methods that may not fit neatly on current technology development roadmaps. Such R&D challenges may also open innovation in the lighting industry to secondary partners — such as raw-goods manufacturers, equipment suppliers, university research programs — partners who are not directly capable of meeting a narrowly-defined end goal such as manufacturing a more efficient A-lamp.


With its long-term vision and patience, the DOE should continue to drive the lighting industry — even acknowledging all the amazing advances we’re currently enjoying — by challenging the status quo with smartly abstracted goals of sustainability to stimulate manufacturers and research organizations to explore dramatically different technical paradigms. The results may lead to unexpected but critically important advances in how we conceive of lamps, luminaires, and systems.



Refocus design challenges to move LED lighting forward

2013年12月19日星期四

United States will ban 40w and 60w incandescent bulbs since 2014 and encourages LED lights

U.S. bulb factories will stop producing best-selling 40-watt and 60-watt incandescent bulbs from 2014. People can replace fluorescent lamp to halogen, compact fluorescent light bulb, LED lights and energy efficient incandescent.


US-ban-40w-60w-incandescent-bulbs-encourage-LED-lights US-ban-40w-60w-incandescent-bulbs-encourage-LED-lights


U.S. bulb factories will stop producing best-selling 40-watt and 60-watt incandescent bulbs from 2014. According to this prohibition adopted in 2007, US eliminated incandescent bulbs more than 100 watt since 2012, and discontinued 75 watts and 100 watts incandescent lamps since 2013. This controversial law designed to promote energy-saving compact fluorescent lamps, LED light bulbs and other energy efficiency lighting.


People can replace fluorescent lamp to halogen, compact fluorescent light bulb, LED lights and energy efficient incandescent, experts pointed out that efficient incandescent approximately cost $ 1.5 each, although far more than the traditional incandescent $ 0.5, but it with doubled life, the energy consumption is also reduced by 28%.


This legislation is signed by former President George W. Bush in 2007, this provision is intended to solve the issue of old-fashioned incandescent with low energy efficiency; according to the EPA’s data, only one-tenth of the power consumed is converted into light by this bulb, the rest of the energy is wasted as heat.


However, this ban may make dissatisfaction to the people who are facing daily necessities price hike.



United States will ban 40w and 60w incandescent bulbs since 2014 and encourages LED lights

2013年12月15日星期日

Global LED lighting market worth $42 billion by 2019

LED Lighting: Market Shares, Strategies, and Forecasts, Worldwide, 2013 to 2019: Next generation lighting achieves a complete replacement of incandescent filament bulbs with LED lighting that is more energy efficient, lasts longer and has a significantly lower cost of operation. LED lighting...


The LED bulbs are implementing new semiconductor technology


LED Lighting: Market Shares, Strategies, and Forecasts, Worldwide, 2013 to 2019: Next generation lighting achieves a complete replacement of incandescent filament bulbs with LED lighting that is more energy efficient, lasts longer and has a significantly lower cost of operation. LED lighting decreases labor costs of replacing bulbs in commercial situations. The LED bulbs are implementing new semiconductor technology.


Worldwide LED lighting markets are poised to achieve significant growth as buildings and communities lead the way in implementing the more cost efficient systems. In some cases, the utility plants are providing funding and financing so that lighting users can make the shift to LED lighting.


LED lamps lower the overall cost of lighting. LED lighting costs are less than costs with incandescent lights. LED lamps offer up to 50,000 hours of illumination with a fraction of the energy used by traditional incandescent bulbs. LED bulbs generate 90% less heat than incandescent bulbs. LED bulbs extend time between bulb replacements. The bulbs are used to achieve a near zero-maintenance lighting system.



Global LED lighting market worth $42 billion by 2019

2013年12月3日星期二

London makes LED street light plans; US and UK projects

London will get the country’s largest deployment of LED street lights by 2016 aiming for 40% energy savings, while a project in Rhode Island may change the thinking in the US on lighting ownership, and North East Lincolnshire pursues another significant UK project.


The UK’s largest city will also get the country’s largest deployment of LED street lights by 2016 aiming for 40% energy savings, while a project in Rhode Island may change the thinking in the US on lighting ownership, and North East Lincolnshire pursues another significant UK project.


London-makes-LED-street-light-plans London-makes-LED-street-light-plans


The Transport for London (TfL) transit authority has announced plans in conjunction with the Mayor’s office to upgrade 35,000 streetlights with LED luminaires and to install a networked adaptive control system to monitor and control the streetlight inventory. North East Lincolnshire is also pursuing a solid-state lighting (SSL) project in the UK targeting 16,500 lights. In the US state of Rhode Island, meanwhile, the activity of a small utility district has shown the cost-saving benefits of LED lighting, and the state is planning a program to aggressively push adoption of SSL.


London SSL plans


The London streetlight project will support Mayor Boris Johnson’s target goals of reaching a 60% reduction in carbon emissions by 2025. “With tens of thousands of lights marking the way on our road network it makes complete sense to focus energy and resources on bringing them up to 21st century standards,” said Johnson. “This is the largest investment to modernize streetlighting on major roads in our capital’s history and will not only cut carbon emissions and save money but it will also lead to even better and safer roads for Londoners.”


The TfL authority has a total inventory of 52,000 lights on the TfL Road Network (TLRN). The plan is to ultimately upgrade all of the lighting over ten years, but the first phase will focus on 35,000 lights that will be replaced by 2016 either as part of normal TfL maintenance or as targeted retrofits that can deliver the most savings. The first phase is projected to reduce emissions by 9700 metric tons annually while saving TfL GBP 1.85 million (about $3 million) — a 40% savings. The initial phase will cost GBP 10.9 million so payback will take a few years.


The savings will be extended in terms of both maintenance costs and maximum energy efficiency by a lighting network with controls and what TfL terms a Central Management System (CMS). TfL will use the system to set light levels to the minimum safe levels based on traffic and pedestrian activity, and to automatically detect required maintenance.


TfL said that it has already awarded a contract to supply the CMS to Harvard Engineering. Moreover, it said that the value of adaptive controls has already been proven out in other UK-based SSL trials. For example, London was one of the cities that took part in the LightSavers consortium trialing LED-based lighting and controls. The TfL also installed LED lighting in the Upper Thames Street tunnel two years back.


Burrillville, Rhode Island


Meanwhile, municipalities large and small continue to pursue SSL streetlight upgrades around the globe. The Pascoag Utility District in Burrillville, Rhode Island, for example, became the first entity in the state to test LEDs on 56 streetlights, according to the Providence Journal. The small project has resulted in a $1710 decrease annually in energy costs and $2535 decrease in maintenance costs.


But the impact of the project could be far greater. In part the success is leading Rhode Island to be the first state to force utilities to allow municipalities to buy energy-efficient streetlights and capitalize on savings. Work in the Rhode Island Public Utilities Commission will allow municipalities to get a lower rate for lower-power fixtures, and an even lower rate when adaptive controls are applied. The action could make the state a leader in LED adoption for roadway lighting.


North East Lincolnshire


Back across the pond in the UK, London is far from alone in installing LED lighting. We recently covered a project in Bath involving LEDs installed on the A4 roadway. Moreover, the Yorkshire Post recently reported that the North East Lincolnshire Council was launching a project involving 16,500 streetlights.


The upfront cost of the project will be GBP 8.2 million that will be spent over the next two years. But the Council pointed to a combination of energy savings, safer roads, and reduced light pollution as justification for the expense.



London makes LED street light plans; US and UK projects

2013年12月2日星期一

AOP Lights Up Songshan Cultural & Creative Park

AOP provides luminaires and corresponding control system while the lighting designers choose HP Linear light with a fixed color temperature (4000K) for the façade. IP68 dustproof and waterproof lighting fixtures are installed on observation windows on each floor to wash the façade of the b...


The Songshan Tabacco Factory, situated in Taipei City for almost 80 years, was built during the period of Japanese occupation in Taiwan to produce and process tobacco in order to provide a better income for the Japanese government. It stopped its tobacco industry in 1998 and was nominated as a municipal historical site in 2001. In recent years, the Factory has been transformed into a park for cultural, art and creative activities. Alliance Optotek Corporation (AOP) was commissioned to give it a new face by illuminating it in a culturally creative way.


aop-lights-up-songshan-cultural-creative-park aop-lights-up-songshan-cultural-creative-park


Located in the center of Taipei City, the Shongshan Tobacco Factory is built with a spacious hinterland. The well preserved complex courtyards illustrate the architectural style and excellent craftsmanship dating back to 1937. With the prosperous increase of Taiwan’s cultural and creative industry in recent years, a great number of designers and artists are eagerly seeking for a foundation to present their creativity to the public. The conversion of the historical Songshan Tobacco Factoryinto the Songshan Cultural Park now provides a perfect platform for cultural exhibitions and events.


There is only one new building in the park– Eslite Songshan Tobacco Factory Store which started operation in July, 2013. It offers a brand new comfortable commercial space for both domestic and offshore renowned designer brands to reside, becomeing a new landmark building for Taiwan’s cultural and creative industry. The new building is designed by an internationally renowned architect, Toyo Ito. The central designing concept lies in the green balcony which retracts upwards layer by layer. This balcony offers a function of overlooking the surrounding environment of Songshan Tobacco Factory relics, patio and lily ponds. It creates new interactions between the new and old buildings. When it comes to exterior lighting design, it is necessary to figure out some ways that can highlight the features of the building without disturbing the tranquil atmosphere.


AOP is responsible for this project. The company provides luminaires and corresponding control system while the lighting designers choose HP Linear light with a fixed color temperature (4000K) for the façade. IP68 dustproof and waterproof lighting fixtures are installed on observation windows on each floor to wash the façade of the building and present a steady and peaceful look at night. At the same time, such lighting also emphasizes the specific style of the building. For the grid structure on each side, SDC controllers and HP projection lamps of both high and low color temperatures (6000K/3000K) are used to create a dynamic and static performance. These interesting changes between light and shadow present a more vigorous aspect to the building.


The biggest challenge of this project is to satisfy lighting designers’ demand and insistence on light quality, control system, color temperature and so forth. The lighting plan for such a large and continuous scale actually imposes extremely high requirement on product stability and consistency for every single lamp. Alliance Optotek Corporation has already accumulated a relatively solid foundation for this which is the reason why owner of the project selected Alliance Optotek Corporation’s products.


aop-lights-up-songshan-cultural-creative-park-HP-Series aop-lights-up-songshan-cultural-creative-park-HP-Series


Project Name: Songshan Cultural & Creative Park

Location:

Taipei, Taiwan

Year completed:

2013

Client:

Songshan Cultural & Creative Park

Photography:

AOP

Architect:

Toyo Ito

Product Designer:

AOP

Product Applied:

HP Linear light, IP68, HP projection lamp

Website: http://www.aoptk.com

Related Website: http://www.songshanculturalpark.org/



AOP Lights Up Songshan Cultural & Creative Park

2013年11月28日星期四

Halogen bulbs replacement needs high efficiency LED drivers

If you are looking to replace halogen bulbs with LEDs, combining a rectifier bridge and a current-controlled synchronous step-up/step-down converter creates a high power factor driver circuit.


halogen-bulbs-replacement-needs-high-efficiency-led-drivers halogen-bulbs-replacement-needs-high-efficiency-led-drivers


If you are looking to replace halogen bulbs with LEDs, combining a rectifier bridge and a current-controlled synchronous step-up/step-down converter creates a high power factor driver circuit, writes Keith Szolusha


LT Journal of Analog Innovation V23N3 – October 2013 – Meet GreeLEDs are increasingly used in 24VAC and 12VAC lighting systems as an energy efficient and high performance alternative to halogen lamps.


Power converters that drive the LEDs should have a high power factor (above 90% in order to meet generally accepted green standards), should be efficient, use a minimal number of components and should run cool. They do not need isolation.


One solution that meets these requirements combines a rectifier bridge and a current-controlled synchronous step-up/step-down converter. Specifically, a synchronous 4-switch buck-boost converter can be paired with a 4-switch ideal diode rectifier bridge for high power LEDs. A lower power design can use a standard diode bridge.


Both solutions are shown here.


The LT3791 60V 4-switch synchronous buck-boost controller IC can drive constant current (either DC or pulsating) into a string of high power LEDs.


It features an output current feedback loop used to drive constant current through a string of LEDs, and a CTRL dimming input pin that can be tied to the 120Hz half-sine wave output of a rectifier bridge to create a high power factor pulsating LED current output.


The LT4320 is an ideal diode rectifier bridge that drives four MOSFETs in place of four typical rectifier diodes for highest efficiency conversion of the 60Hz 24VAC input to 24VRMS 120Hz pulsating output. When currents reach 5A and higher, the diodes in a standard rectifier bridge dissipate significant power and heat up.


The diode rectifier bridge helps high power AC applications run efficient and cool by driving low resistance external N-channel FETs.


LED-driver-Fig1 LED-driver-Fig1


Figure 1 shows an LED driver that operates with 98.1% power factor directly from 24VAC. It can drive up to 25V of LEDS with 120Hz pulsating power with LED current peaking at 4.4A.


At 120Hz, the pulsing of the light is not detectable by the human eye and is seen as constant brightness. The high power factor 24AC input voltage and current waveforms are shown in Figure 2. The 10Hz pulsating LED current waveforms are shown in Figure 3.


LED current foldback with the CTRL pin voltage is used to achieve the high power factor. The maximum LED current is set by RLED at 4.5A, but the CTRL pin monitors the post-rectifier 120Hz PVIN input voltage and shapes the LED current waveform to match the input.


When the input drops below the shutdown pin threshold, the IC goes into shutdown and switching stops. The LED current trails off as the output capacitors are discharged and soon enough, the input rises above the shutdown pin threshold and the buck-boost converter starts back up. With the CTRL pin folding back the LED current at low input, start-up is not harsh and inrush currents do not affect the high power factor.


The 24VAC pulsating LED driver converter in Figure 1 delivers approximately 60W of LED lighting at 94% efficiency.


This is roughly equivalent to 600W of halogen lighting replacement without using lead, mercury, argon, and Xenon or krypton gases.


The four synchronous switches of the converter and those of the ideal diode bridge are responsible for the high efficiency.


Photo above shows the circuit components remaining cool despite the 60W conversion. The components have less than 24°C temperature rise, showing that there is plenty of room to spare for even higher power applications. A standard rectifier bridge would produce about a 50°C temperature rise and run several efficiency points lower.


Total efficiency is calculated by measuring the input power, the power factor, and the delivered output power separately. The values of 63.0W real input power, 64.4W apparent input power and 98.1% power factor are measured with an HP 6812A AC power source.


LED-driver-Fig2 LED-driver-Fig2


Measurement of the output power is a bit more complex. A current probe and oscilloscope are used to capture the pulsing current and voltage waveforms at the output of the converter.


From these waveforms, the converter output RMS current and voltage is calculated for the on-time (tON) of the LED.


The on-time output power is:

POUT(ON) = VRMS(ON) • IRMS(ON)


Output power is zero during LED off-time, where the current is zero. The output power of 60W is calculated via a simple duty cycle equation:

POUT = POUT(ON) • tON • 120Hz.

Overall efficiency = output power divided by real input power.


The circuit in Figure 4 is a 24W pulsating LED driver that operates from 24VAC input. Because the power level here is less than half of the 60W LED driver in Figure 1, the rectifier bridge shown in Figure 4 is made from four discrete Schottky diodes, instead of ideal diodes.


LED-driver-Fig3 LED-driver-Fig3


The trade-offs for simplicity are slightly lower efficiency and additional heat dissipation.


The principals of the 24W circuit are the same as the 60W circuit and the two operate in the same manner. Efficiency of the 24W circuit is 90%, lower than the 94% achieved by the 60W circuit. Nevertheless, this loss is acceptable due to the overall lower power, making the temperature rise in the discrete rectifier bridge components comparable between the two. With the discrete diode rectifier bridge, the components only heat up to 49°C as shown in Figure 7, well within the requirements of most high power LED drivers.


For higher efficiency, simply replace the discrete rectifier with a LT4320-based rectifier. In general, as power levels and temperatures rise, the need for synchronous rectification in both the converter and rectifier goes up.


Keith Szolusha, applications engineering section leader, power products at Linear Technology


LED-driver-Fig4 LED-driver-Fig4



Buy High power LED drivers


High-Power-LED-Driver-at-Topledlight High-Power-LED-Driver-at-Topledlight




Halogen bulbs replacement needs high efficiency LED drivers

2013年11月23日星期六

Notre Dame switches to LED lights in Purcell Pavilion

There are 116 lights in the ceiling of the Purcell Pavilion on the Notre Dame campus. Because all of those lights use up a lot of electricity the university switched to LED lights.


notre-dame-switches-to-led-lights-in-purcell-pavilion notre-dame-switches-to-led-lights-in-purcell-pavilion


NOTRE DAME, Ind. — There are 116 lights in the ceiling of the Purcell Pavilion on the Notre Dame campus. Because all of those lights use up a lot of electricity the university switched to LED lights.


“You actually have better color rendering. You’re going to see a truer color. What’s under an LED light source is very bright, very crisp, and very clean,” said Paul Kempf, Senior Director of Utilities and Maintenance.


Pregame introductions will now be done by simply dimming the lights.


The old lights only had two settings – on and off.


With these new lights, the Irish are sure to be one of the most visible teams in the country.


Kempf says he thinks Notre Dame is one of the first campuses in the country to use led technology on the basketball court.


Each fixture uses about 411 watts of energy compared to the old fixtures that used 1500 watts each.


Purcell Pavilion won’t be the last building in Notre Dame to use LEDs. The maintenance department is already planning to use that same technology to light the dome.



Notre Dame switches to LED lights in Purcell Pavilion

How One Light Bulb Can Change Your Life

What a Difference a Light Bulb Makes? People in developing countries are leapfrogging our 19th century technology. There’s a simple technology that transforms our lives every day, and yet we rarely give a passing thought to its existence (unless of course it flares out at an inopportune moment): ...


What a Difference a Light Bulb Makes? People in developing countries are leapfrogging our 19th century technology.


An M-Kopa solar system, in Kenya. An M-Kopa solar system, in Kenya.


There’s a simple technology that transforms our lives every day, and yet we rarely give a passing thought to its existence (unless of course it flares out at an inopportune moment): the light bulb. And yet for more than a billion people in the developing world who lack access to electricity, this simple device can make an unimaginable difference.


Thomas Edison didn’t actually invent the light bulb, as is commonly credited; rather, he built on decades of research and perfected a practical method for delivering light powered by electricity. But because of Edison, in 1882 the first light bulbs graced buildings in New York City. A New York Herald reporter described it: “In stores and business places throughout the lower quarter of the city, there was a strange glow last night. The dim flicker of gas, often subdued and debilitated by grim and uncleanly globes, was supplanted by a steady glare, bright and mellow, which illuminated interiors and shown through windows fixed and unwavering. … It was the glowing incandescent lamps of Edison, used last evening for the first time.”


A family with a light bulb is a family with opportunities.

We’ve been reaping the benefits ever since. Consider this: Night drifts in through the window, and the room darkens. You casually stroll over and flip a switch, a movement so ingrained you barely notice you’ve done so. The bulbs blaze, the dusky shadows outside disappear. Your home once again turns bright as day. You read a book, maybe cook dinner, and the kids in the house settle in to do some homework.


But for people around the world who can’t flip that switch, their lives are ruled by that great ball of flaming plasma passing across the sky. To the extent that they do illuminate their homes after the sun dips below the horizon, they rely on candles or kerosene, both of which are expensive, dangerous, and polluting. In some areas of Africa, people spend from 10 to 30 percent of their income on refilling kerosene lamps, which are little more than tin cans with an open flame. Burning them releases millions of tons of carbon dioxide per year and contributes to climate change. And igniting them in a closed home can equate to smoking a couple of packs a cigarettes a day. Smoke from burning kerosene irritates the eyes, so students extinguish them instead of doing homework.


On the flip side, a family with a light bulb is a family with opportunities. Women can set up small shops in their homes, for instance, to sew or cook for extra money. Kids can study for school: A light may keep a girl or boy from dropping out. Families read, or may use the light to set up classes to teach others to read. A shop owner keeps his or her store open longer, earns more money, sends more kids to school—and those kids can then use the glow to read in the evenings. That’s why there are dozens of organizations around the world dedicated to nothing more than making sure that people have access to light.


Many of the communities without access to regular electricity are now leapfrogging our ancient 1800s technology. The ubiquitous incandescent bulb, the one perfected by Edison more than a century ago, basically works via a filament that, when electricity passes through, burns hot enough to emit light. But about 95 percent of that energy is wasted as heat. As a result, incandescents are being phased out by many governments; the U.S. slowly began phasing them out in 2012. Compact fluorescent lights, or CFLs, were invented in the 1940s and are significantly more energy efficient. But for decades their cooler tone turned off many consumers (though the color has gotten warmer, and CFLs have been replacing incandescents).


Light-emitting diodes, or LEDs, are the top new technology in lighting. When electricity is applied to an LED, electrons jump from one layer of material within the diode to another and give off light. They’re hardy, they last for years, and they’re incredibly energy efficient. The problem is that white LEDs are pricey. Americans might weigh the options and decide: Why shell out around $10 to $20 for an LED, even if it will last perhaps 25 times longer than the cheap incandescent?


But nearly unbreakable LEDs are easily paired with solar power, and so in poor communities, what seems excessive to us becomes a long-lasting investment that bypasses both inefficient incandescents and the lumbering power grid. Some nonprofits, such the Light Up the World Foundation, pair solar panels with LEDs. The organization Solar Sister provides women in Africa with training, marketing, and an inventory of solar-powered light bulbs. M-Kopa in Kenya provides a financing scheme along with the requisite technology; the organization sells an entire home system with solar panels, lights, and a cellphone charger, for about $200. Customers pay as little as about 45 cents a day and can pay off the debt in a year.


Companies are also focusing on the design of that LED light in the first place. D.light Solar provides rugged lights and chargers to M-Kopa and has already sold more than 1 million units. Nokero, founded in 2010 (the name comes from “no kerosene”), just this October released the latest version of their solar-powered lanterns. The elaborate $45 version can either plug into the grid or recharge via solar panels, and it includes outlets that allow users to power their mobile phones. Their simplified solar-powered bulb is only $5 to $6, the cheapest on the market. They’ve already sold hundreds of thousands of units throughout the developing world through commercial distributors, nonprofits, and governments.


That light can do more than improve someone’s financial situation: A light bulb can save a life. When Laura Stachel, an obstetrician and gynecologist in California, was on a research trip to Nigeria in 2008, the lights went out during an emergency C-section. She was able to supply her flashlight, but she quickly realized that surgeries were postponed, and people died, simply due to a lack of light. This was true not only in Nigeria, but all around Africa. She returned home and with her husband designed a so-called “solar suitcase,” now the foundation of her nonprofit, We Care Solar. The suitcases include solar panels to be mounted on a hospital roof, a battery for energy storage, rechargeable LED lights and a headlamp, walkie-talkies for communication, and a fetal heart-rate monitor. Today, these solar-powered lights are saving lives in 27 countries in Africa, Asia, and Central America. (Stachel was named a CNN 2013 Top 10 Hero.)


It may seem like a throwaway technology to us. But for perhaps 20 percent of the world population, a functioning, reliable light bulb is a godsend.



How One Light Bulb Can Change Your Life

2013年11月16日星期六

Here Comes Cree: Perspectives on the Future of LED Lighting

We continue to believe that Cree is poised to benefit from the LED lighting adoption with its vertical strategy and that one should take a multiple-quarter view of its consumer light bulb approach.


“No one is saying LEDs aren’t ready anymore.”


In 2008, after a decade of experimentation and, later, acquisition of a competitor, Cree introduced its first indoor lighting-class LED fixtures.
Cree_Lighting Cree_Lighting[/caption]

Around that time, market growth was modest and lighting companies were just beginning to realize the commercial promise of the technology.


Six years later, Cree has picked up a 10 percent share in the global LED market and is one of the more aggressive cost leaders in the industry. It is part of a growing group of semiconductor companies chipping away at the traditional lighting manufacturers that have dominated the market since the dawn of the incandescent light bulb.


“Around 2007 and 2008, the legacy guys were saying LEDs were coming, but that they were not yet ready. Now, no one is saying LEDs aren’t ready anymore,” said Greg Merritt, vice president of marketing at Cree, in a recent interview. “Every company is scrambling as fast as it can to bring products to market.”


Cree’s first 6-inch, 12-watt downlight released in 2008 cost $100. It now has a 6-inch, 9.5-watt downlight product retailing in Home Depot for less than $20 without rebates.


The company has hit a number of other important milestones recently. In March, it released a 6-watt bright-white LED for under $10; in August, it started selling 25-watt and 42-watt streetlights for $99; and this fall, it unveiled a consumer bulb for $20 ($13 with rebates) with a color rendering index of 93 — coming close to the warm white light of an incandescent bulb and becoming the first company to meet California’s voluntary standard for LED lighting quality.


Of course, other manufacturers — both new players and legacy firms — are aggressively working to drop LED costs as well. Although Cree has a very slight edge in pricing, many are offering similar products at comparable price points.


In an interview earlier this year with GTM, Ed Crawford, CEO of Philips Lighting North America, talked about how increasing fragmentation and pricing pressures are forcing change within the incumbent.


“We have to reinvent ourselves. Because if we didn’t change, we’d really run the risk of being left in the dust. As a lighting company, you need to adapt to these changes now — the business as we’ve known it over the last 100 years won’t be the same in five years,” said Crawford.


So how is a relatively new entrant like Cree thinking about reinventing the lighting market? Greg Merritt provided some insight.


From 2008 to 2011, Cree was focused primarily on performance by dropping wattage, improving light quality and increasing product lifecycles. Today, while performance is still clearly a priority, the company is focused more aggressively on expanding manufacturing volume, reducing material costs and lowering installation costs.


“LEDs have gone from 60 percent to 70 percent of the cost of a lighting fixture to less than half. You now have more costs in other places: metal, wiring and downstream installation,” said Merritt. “Previously it was all about making the LED better, now it’s reducing the cost of the rest of the materials.”


The situation is somewhat analogous to the solar industry, where increased manufacturing volumes forced a strong drop in module prices. Today, modules are no longer the most expensive component of an installed system, and companies are looking to reduce other hardware and soft costs when developing projects.


“We are increasingly focused on the downstream market,” said Merritt. “How do you pull together options, simplify the process, and make LEDs easily consumable for companies that weren’t going to upgrade?”


Merritt pointed to the Department of Energy’s Better Buildings Initiative, which helped set up the infrastructure to find contractors and financing for projects. Although Cree would not want to perform that exact function, Merritt said the company is looking to work with “the people that have the capability to bring that information together and equip them with the tools they need.”


Cree is not unique in thinking about better ways to deploy product downstream. This week, Philips announced a “lighting-as-a-service” model that will allow the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority to install 13,000 LEDs at no upfront cost.


Working with lighting controls companies to integrate occupancy sensors and ambient light sensors with LEDs is also key to moving further downstream. Cree has formed partnerships with Daintree Networks and Lutron for this purpose. This strategy is also not unique to Cree — nearly every major manufacturer has formed similar partnerships to make LEDs smarter and easier to integrate in the commercial sector.


Cree isn’t just competing with the well-established legacy players like GE, Osram and Philips. It is also facing competition from consumer electronics firms like LG and Samsung, as well as a cadre of Chinese companies funded by China’s central government. Although these Chinese companies have yet to present a major threat, the broadening ecosystem of manufacturers puts pressure on a company like Cree to ramp up production — which means the company operates on fairly slim margins.


But Merritt said Cree’s approach is to keep innovating and producing “at a pace [competitors] can’t match.”


“Once you start playing defense, you are doomed,” said Merritt. “As long as you keep going, you’ll stay ahead. You just have to keep playing offense.”


Merritt said the next steps for LED innovation are controllability and building new architectural applications.


Controllability will be addressed through partnerships with providers of commercial intelligent lighting platforms. However, Cree does not yet have a residential product like Philips’ hue bulb, which can be controlled in unique ways by a smartphone.


Architectural applications — building LEDs into ceiling tiles, walls, stairwells, streetlights and parking structures in new ways — are perhaps the biggest source of untapped innovation downstream.


“There is no inherent reason why they should fit the same form as traditional lighting. With LEDs, there’s a lot of stuff you couldn’t do before. People are pretty excited about that,” he said.


Looking at Cree’s position and future strategy for growth, analysts are modestly optimistic about the company.


Even though Cree was able to grow revenue by 24 percent and stay out of debt in the first quarter of its 2014 fiscal year, Cree’s stock dropped 17 percent in late October due to its inability to meet guidance. The firm also said it would be spending more money than expected on marketing its Energy Star light bulb, as well as ramping production of its consumer bulbs in Home Depot stores — a product that offers very slim margins.


However, Daniel Amir, an analyst with Lazard Capital, was positive about Cree’s prospects in a recent research note, saying: “We continue to believe that Cree is poised to benefit from the LED lighting adoption with its vertical strategy and that one should take a multiple-quarter view of its consumer light bulb approach.”


About Cree


Cree-LED-logo Cree-LED-logo[/caption]


Cree, Inc. is a global, industry-leading manufacturer of lighting-class LEDs, LED lighting technologies, and semiconductor solutions for radio frequency (RF) and power applications. Cree is paving the way for the LED lighting revolution by producing long-lasting, energy-efficient LED lighting, rendering traditional technologies obsolete.


Cree’s LED Components and Modules division includes the market’s brightest and most reliable lighting-class LEDs, including the Cree XLamp® LED portfolio. By featuring light that is both efficient and beautiful, Cree LED components and modules offer lighting manufacturers and designers high-performance LEDs and LED modules that lower system cost.


Cree leads the industry in brightness and reliability for power LEDs with its XLamp LED family. Through XLamp LEDs, Cree is enabling the lighting industry with efficient LED light. With the largest family of high-performance, commercially-available LEDs, Cree has the right LED for your design.


Cree LED modules provide a simple solution for lighting designers and manufacturers to adopt best-in-class LED lighting, accelerating time to market and lowering system cost. For more information, visit www.cree.com.



Here Comes Cree: Perspectives on the Future of LED Lighting

Get LED holiday lights for free - Truro to host LED light exchange

TRURO – If you’re in the market for some bright new ideas for holiday decorating, you might want to consider trading in some of your old lights for free LED lights. Participants who bring two strings of traditional glass holiday lights for free recycling will receive one string of LED holiday lig...


beautiful-LED-christmas-lights beautiful-LED-christmas-lights[/caption]


Town of Truro Parks, Recreation and Culture has teamed up with Efficiency Nova Scotia to assist in the LED Holiday Light Exchange which will take place Friday, Nov. 22 during the Downtown Truro Partnership’s annual tree lighting and carol sing.



The exchange will begin at 7 p.m. in Truro’s Downtown Civic Square, near the Truro Library. The Festival of Lights Kickoff Celebration begins at 7:30 p.m.


Participants who bring two strings of traditional glass holiday lights for free recycling will receive one string of LED holiday lights for free.
 Quantities are limited, based on a first-come, first-served basis, so only one LED set is available per person. All collected traditional holiday lights will be recycled in an environmentally responsible manner. Such exchanges have been held in Truro for the past number of years in conjunction with the Downtown Truro Partnership’s holiday extravaganza, which also includes a Santa Claus Parade on Saturday, Nov. 23 at 6 p.m.


If you are not in Truro, UK, you should check LED holiday lights on Kiwi Lighting online store: TopLEDlight.com for some LED Strip Lights/ LED Christmas decoration lights/ Dream-Color-LED-Light-Strip for Christmas decoration.


Other Christmas items: http://www.topledlight.com/index.php?main_page=advanced_search_result&inc_subcat=1&search_in_description=1&categories_id=&keyword=Christmas+


LED Christmas decoration lights Dream-Color-LED-Light-Strip-TopLEDlight LED Christmas decoration lights Dream-Color-LED-Light-Strip-TopLEDlight[/caption]



Get LED holiday lights for free - Truro to host LED light exchange

2013年11月13日星期三

Peduto, city charm businessman pondering Pittsburgh for LED light plant

Robert Grah, founder of Slovenia-based Grah Lighting, is in Pittsburgh to tour potential sites for an LED light manufacturing facility and meet with potential investors. Pittsburgh is in the running with Cleveland and Denver.


Robert Grah, founder of Slovenia-based Grah Lighting, is in Pittsburgh to tour potential sites for an LED light manufacturing facility and meet with potential investors. Pittsburgh is in the running with Cleveland and Denver.


Pittsburgh’s genuine interest might lead Slovenian LED light maker Robert Grah to open his company’s next manufacturing plant here, he said on Wednesday as he sat in a 30th-floor conference room overlooking Downtown.


In the next conference room, Kevin Acklin, an attorney who will become Mayor-elect Bill Peduto’s chief of staff, met privately with a potential investor in Grah’s venture. Another investor, representing a New York private-equity firm, sat in the waiting room.


“It has been really important for me to see that the City of Pittsburgh has such a huge interest to win our company. I am impressed,” said Grah, managing director of Slovenia-based Grah Lighting, which employs 1,200 people.


Peduto is a driving force behind the effort to entice Grah Lighting to establish a plant here, rather than in Cleveland or Denver.


It would employ up to 150 people initially and potentially produce longer-lasting, energy efficient LED streetlights to replace the city’s 37,000 remaining traditional ones.


Peduto is the only top official from the three American cities to travel to Slovenia to visit one of Grah’s factories, Grah said.


Yet he gave no indication about which city he prefers and said he’ll decide by year’s end.


“I am a professional businessman. I will count all the plusses and minuses,” he said.


The plant would be the headquarters for Grah’s non-automotive LED light production for North, Central and South America. The company has an automotive lighting plant in Detroit.


Aside from streetlights, the facility would make all kinds of exterior, interior and underwater lighting, Grah said.


Grah toured two sites — the Crucible Building in the Strip District and the former LTV Steel Co. property in Hazelwood that is being prepared for an estimated $1 billion in riverfront development.


“Both sites are fit for our production,” Grah said.


Crucible Steel built its mill during the World War I era, said Shadyside developer Brian Schreiber, who owns the building. It became home to retail tenants, including furniture wholesalers and, most recently, online clothing retailer ModCloth, Schreiber said. It has been vacant for about a year.


Crews have renovated the first floor and should soon start work on the upper floor. Grah told Schreiber he would need at least 20,000 square feet to start operations, Schreiber said.


“It seems like our building has all the ingredients,” Schreiber said.


Grah said the former LTV Steel site is attractive because the company could build from the ground up. Grading work on the 178-acre site is expected to be completed early next year and work on a road and infrastructure for utilities will begin, said Tim White, vice president of Downtown-based Regional Industrial Development Corp., which is collaborating with four foundations to develop the site.


“We could build a building at the same time the (infrastructure work) is going on, so I think the timing lines up for the site,” White said.


Grah isn’t seeking public subsidies to build. He does want private investors to partner with him.


He didn’t say how much money he hopes to get, and wouldn’t put an overall price tag on the development. Peduto has told the Tribune-Review that the manufacturer is looking for at least $3 million from investors.


Grah said he is looking for someone who “knows the ropes,” from a local business standpoint.


“I am not from America. You must be born here to understand this market. A guideline of mine is, I always take a local partner because he knows how to work in this market,” Grah said.


Wherever it locates, Grah’s plant will be the latest in a growing number of Slovenian companies to establish operations in the United States, said Jurcek Zmauc, Slovenia’s consul general for 10 U.S. states, including Pennsylvania.


Zmauc, who accompanied Grah to Pittsburgh, said the Cleveland-based Slovenian-American Business Association has helped a Slovenian polymer company get off the ground in Akron and a Slovenian microbrewer get started in Cleveland.



Peduto, city charm businessman pondering Pittsburgh for LED light plant

Dialog announces an IC-level platform to support Ledotron controls in LED lighting

Dialog Semiconductor has announced the SmarteXite family of ICs and the initial iW6401 product for Ledotron-based solid-state lighting (SSL) products, along with a partnership with Sengled. The new family enables digital interconnects between LED-based lamps or luminaires, and adaptive-control...


Products with digital dimming technology and communications with switches and sensors with no new wires are realizable with the new Dialog Semiconductor SmarteXite family of Ledotron-compatible ICs.
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Dialog Semiconductor has announced the SmarteXite family of ICs and the initial iW6401 product for Ledotron-based solid-state lighting (SSL) products, along with a partnership with Sengled. The new family enables digital interconnects between LED-based lamps or luminaires, and adaptive-control elements such as switches and sensors that compose a solid-state lighting (SSL) system.


Ledotron is an initiative launched by Feller, Gira, Jung Merten, Schneider Electric, Radium, and Osram — primarily centric to Europe at the moment — that establishes a digital communication scheme for dimming. The communications between lamps or luminaires and other elements such as switches can run over the existing power line or via the use of wireless interconnects.


The iW6401 is a configurable digital IC that Dialog refers to as a driver IC, although as you can see from the nearby illustration, the IC is more a power-management IC. The power conversion circuits must be implemented separately from the iW6401. But the new IC, according to Dialog, is the first to implement the Ledotron IEC 62756-1 dimming protocol and will enable plug-and-play interconnected SSL products.


Apparently the IC, while integrating the Ledotron support, has no inherent connectivity beyond the chip level. But an I2C chip-level serial interconnect will allow SSL product developers to add power line or wireless interconnectivity, such as ZigBee or Wi-Fi, in a separate IC.
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Dialog is also touting the digital configurability of the iW6401 as a key factor in driving down the cost of SSL products including retrofit lamps. The company says that an LED lamp can be configured via software on a manufacturing line for settings such as color or brightness, potentially allowing a manufacturer to design one product and offer different versions with a simplified supply chain.


Dialog also announced a partnership with Sengled Lighting, a manufacturer of LED retrofit lamps that will presumably use the new IC. “Smart lighting is one of the most important growth segments in LED lighting, with digital dimming and wireless control as the next major steps in creating innovative products,” said Johnson Shen, founder and president of Sengled. “With Dialog’s SmarteXite family of LED driver products, we can accelerate our innovation cycles and create new lighting experiences for our customers.”


The partners also asserted growing popularity for the Ledotron technology. For example, Insta is a member of the Ledotron Marketing Alliance and has already launched a dimmer product. “With Ledotron we have created a digital dimmer for a digital light source, which resolves all compatibility and performance issues known from traditional dimmers. Beyond being retrofit, Ledotron makes LED lighting future-fit and smart-fit,” said Alexander Burgbacher, CEO of Insta. “The adoption of Ledotron in LED lighting is gaining momentum, as the integration into lamps is made easier with the adoption of the iW6401, the first in a range of smarteXite products from Dialog.”


About Dialog Semiconductor


Dialog-Semiconductor-Logo Dialog-Semiconductor-Logo[/caption]

Dialog Semiconductor PLC is a German-based manufacturer of semiconductor based system solutions. The company is registered in the United Kingdom but headquartered in Kirchheim unter Teck, a town in the Stuttgart metropolitan area. Dialog Semiconductor develops integrated circuits for power and motor control as well as audio and display processing. Their products are mainly used within mobile phones and the automotive industry. Dialog Semiconductor is fabless, but maintains own test and physical laboratories at its headquarters in Kirchheim.



Dialog announces an IC-level platform to support Ledotron controls in LED lighting

Washington Metro Goes Green & Saves Green with Philips Performance Lighting Contract

Washington Metro Goes Green & Saves Green with Philips Performance Lighting Contract, Delivering on Sustainability Goals with 15 Million kWh Saved Annually.
Innovative new multi-year, turn-key lighting-as-a-service model gives WMATA brighter, safer LED lighting for garages, with none of the...


Philips, the global leader in LED lighting systems was recently awarded a ten year performance lighting contract with the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA) that will upgrade the lighting in WMATA 25 parking garages. Over 13,000 lighting fixtures will be converted to an innovative, custom-designed LED lighting solution that will reduce energy usage by 68 percent or 15 million kWatt hours per year and provide real time data on energy consumption. The new Philips system is a first of its kind and will not only make the garages brighter and safer for WMATA’s 66,000 parking garage customers, it will remove over 11,000 metric tons of CO2 from the environment. Philips will monitor and maintain the lighting solution which will be financed through energy cost savings, requiring no up-front capital costs.


WMATA was created by an interstate compact in 1967 to plan, develop, build, finance and operate a balanced regional transportation system in the National Capital Area. Today, Metrorail serves 86 stations and operates a 106 mile rail system. A fleet of 1,116 rail cars provides service seven days a week. The organization continually looks for ways to improve the safety and experience of users and recently decided to upgrade their aging high pressure sodium lighting system to an innovative LED system from Philips that could provide white light exactly when and where it was needed. Additionally, the anticipated carbon footprint reduction in moving to the more energy efficient system is the equivalent to removing over 2,300 cars from the road or the amount of CO2 that 280,000 trees would remove from the atmosphere over a ten year period.


Moreover, Philips has worked closely with WMATA to gain a deep understanding of their needs, and will tailor the lighting in each garage to ensure that it delivers the optimum light levels for that structure. This will ensure that WMATA’s customers feel safe in the structures in off-hours, while monitoring will allow for quick response times should there be a system related issue. Because Philips is ensuring light levels and delivering the solutions as a service that is paid for by the energy savings, WMATA is able to upgrade their infrastructure without long term impact to capital and operating budgets.


Manufactured in Philips’ facilities located in San Marcos, Texas, the system is open and flexible, allowing it to be combined with other building automation systems. It will cover both the interior and exterior lighting of the parking garages and will include Philips’ latest site-specific systems, the G3 and EcoForm luminaires. Both feature the latest Philips LUXEON LED technology, as well as a modular design that can be configured to the lighting needs of each garage. An adaptive motion response system and innovative wireless controls allow the system to dim when no one is present and seamlessly increase light levels when a space is occupied – creating a safe environment while achieving even higher energy savings.


“With digital lighting systems we really need to break with conventional thinking and look to the services and delivery models of the software industry to understand the future of lighting and how we can remove one of the greatest barriers to adoption – the up-front costs,” said Bruno Biasiotta, president and CEO of Philips Lighting Americas. “As a forward-thinking organization, WMATA has taken a holistic view of their parking garage solution and worked with us to finance the system through energy-savings costs, while ensuring they could deliver on their priorities. One of the benefits of this system is that real-time access to actionable data ‘future-proofs’ the system, allowing Metro to continually adapt to their needs through real time monitoring and measurement.”


Philips will manage the installation process then continually manage the monitoring of the system over the duration of the contract, ensuring that the system is running optimally and making any necessary adjustments that can help WMATA better serve its customers.


For more information about innovative Philips lighting systems, please visit http://www.usa.lighting.philips.com/



Washington Metro Goes Green & Saves Green with Philips Performance Lighting Contract