Pushing LEDs for Municipal Lighting

Duke Energy Corp. and Cree Inc. have launched a project to evaluate the use of light-emitting diodes in widespread commercial purposes. Cree has installed 19 outdoor LED lights at the company’s Durham headquarters, replacing standard high-pressure sodium light fixtures.

Cree, based in Durham, N.C., makes semiconductors designed to enhance the value of LED solid-state lighting, power and communications products by significantly increasing their energy performance.

“We believe LED technology holds tremendous potential for reducing both energy consumption and equipment maintenance without compromising safety,” says Ted Schultz, Duke’s vice president of energy efficiency. “We believe this collaboration with Cree will further demonstrate LEDs as a viable alternative to existing commercial lighting technology.” Advanced Energy, a Raleigh-based energy nonprofit, and the Electric Power Research Institute will assist with the project. They will collect data, assure research protocols are observed and report results.

Cree also operates the LEDCity.org website, described as “an expanding community of government and industry parties working to promote and deploy LED lighting technology across the full range of municipal infrastructure” in order to save energy, protect the environment, reduce maintenance costs, improve light quality for improved visibility and safety, and save tax dollars.

LEDCity.org is Cree’s attempt to not just compete in the growing marketplace for eco-friendly, energy-saving LED lighting, but to proactively expand that marketplace.

The LEDCity.org website claims 22 percent of electricity in the U.S. is used for lighting, and 90 percent of the power used for a light bulb produces heat rather than light - but LEDs are over four times more efficient than traditional incandescent light bulbs.

They also last a lot longer and, unlike compact fluorescent bulbs, they don’t contain mercury and are considered environmentally clean.

The City of Raleigh is seeing projected savings in energy and replacement costs from its test of LED lighting in one level of a city parking garage.

If your city government isn’t looking at switching to LEDs, ask them why not.



One Comment

  1. Posted October 16, 2007 at 1:04 pm | Permalink

    If your city government isn’t looking at switching to LEDs, ask them why not.

    And if they’re looking at switching from low-pressure sodium to LED, ask them why. I can’t tell from this report what type of lighting the parking garage in which LEDs were installed used to use. If it was incandescent, any change would have resulted in an improvement.

One Trackback

  1. By LEDs for municipal lighting « Later On on October 15, 2007 at 7:52 pm

    [...] Environment, Global warming, Government, Technology tagged LED lighting at 5:52 pm by LeisureGuy This is an interesting post, and the Raleigh NC link shows that replacing the current lights in just one level of a parking [...]

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