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Rocky Kistner

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New Energy Efficient Lighting Puts People to Work

Posted: 12/19/11 01:00 PM ET

Deep in the heart of America’s rust belt a new generation of companies is riding a wave of job-creating lighting technologies as new federal lighting efficiency standards are phased in starting next month. In Ohio, the birthplace of Thomas Edison and home to light bulb manufacturers GE and TCP, engineering, production and installation jobs are being created as an tsunami of new lighting products pours into home and business markets.  

Despite Congressional Republicans' last minute efforts to undermine new light bulb efficiency standards (read NRDC's Kit Kennedy's blog here), the money-saving law  remains in place and takes effect on January 1 as planned. That's good for American consumers--and for American workers and their companies. 

Take Venture Lighting Intl, for instance, an Ohio company that makes many of the industrial strength energy efficient metal halide lights that illuminate our city streets and industrial parks. Starting in 2012, the company will begin making energy-efficient advanced incandescents—2 X bulbs—that will be twice as efficient as the old 100-watt energy-hogs being phased out of the market next year.

Venture Lighting's sister company Deposition Sciences in Santa Rosa, CA, makes many special optical film coatings for a variety of high tech communications and science applications. This high-tech coating is the “special sauce” that reflects wasted heat generated by the bulb back onto the internal filament, making the light twice as efficient and extending its life. But you wouldn’t know it by looking at it; the bulb looks and acts exactly like the old inefficient incandescent, but saves you twice as much on electricity.

And it will cost about the same as the compact fluorescents now on the market. “People really want their incandescent bulbs,” said Steve Stockdale, new market development manager of Venture Lighting's parent company, Advanced Lighting Technologies. “LEDs are still expensive for some people and many people are not happy with CFLs, so the 2X incandescent bulb will be a nice third technology for many people. We will be giving people exactly what they are used to with no compromise in light quality.”

Venture Lighting's energy efficient bulb (r) next its old 100-watt replacement.

Photo: Rocky Kistner/NRDC

Stockdale says the new bulb has already created new jobs for Americans, from the lighting engineers who worked on the new technology in Ohio to the people who make the new coating machines at its Santa Rosa plant. And he says the company hopes to create more jobs in places like Ohio as the “tipping point” in demand increases as the new energy efficiency lighting standards kick in next year. 

Elsewhere in Ohio, there are other jobs being created as more and more efficient lighting products hit the market. More and more manufacturers are switching to new money saving technologies. And that means more jobs for installers too.

J&M Electrical Supply in Cambridge has been installing major energy efficiency retrofits for major manufacturing companies like Detroit Diesel in the area, saving them tens of thousands of dollars a year in energy costs. Utilities like American Electric Power also have been providing rebate incentives that make the investments a “no brainer,” says Bill Jarvis, J&M’s sales manager.

“Cutting light consumption in half is the low hanging fruit. It’s a no-brainer when we sit down with the plant manager. With the new energy efficient lights, we can increase the light output and quality while reducing their overall energy costs. When we show a plant manager they can pay for the retrofit in two years, it’s a slam dunk.”

Bill Jarvis at J&M's Electrical Supply in Cambridge, OH

Jay Patterson with some lights he installed in OH.  Photos: Rocky Kistner/NRDC

Jay Patterson is a Cambridge, OH, lighting and energy consultant who has seen his business double and triple in the past few years as demand skyrockets for new efficient lighting products. Patterson works with companies of all sizes and shapes and says the demand for new money-saving lighting technology is making it hard to find qualified people. Patterson says with the new energy efficient lighting products coming on the market, their return on investment is almost always under two years. That makes investing in it common business sense.

“I was pushing energy savings before Al Gore,” Patterson says. “We can cut the light bills for most of our customers by 30 to 40 percent. The message I have is they can get better lighting at less cost and save money…I’m hearing from people now 50 miles away.”

Of course, Ohio isn’t the only place where an efficient lighting stampede is taking place. People and businesses across the country are realizing it’s smart to make the switch to new money saving lighting technologies like LEDs. And new high tech bulb manufacturers like Florida’s Lighting Science Group are hiring former NASA scientists to design these money-saving technologies (check out a great local news TV report on the jobs being created there now). Here’s what Lighting Science Group CEO Jim Hayworth wrote for Roll Call last summer:

Last month, Lighting Science Group celebrated a monumental achievement — becoming the first U.S.  company to manufacture 2 million LED bulbs in less than a year. These bulbs will save Americans about $34 million in electricity costs — more than 280 million kilowatt hours — over the course of a year, equal to the annual greenhouse gas emissions from about 38,000 passenger vehicles or the carbon dioxide emissions from the electricity use of about 24,000 homes for one year. A year ago, Lighting Science Group had 100 employees in Florida; we now have 350.

Those jobs will keep coming as the demand for money saving bulbs and listing systems continues to rise. The new energy efficiency standards will continue to help drive more investments in money-saving lighting technologies, saving big bucks for consumers and creating manufacturing and lighting installing jobs at the same time.

So next time you hear someone complain that they can’t buy their old fashioned light bulb, take a trip to the local hardware store and check out the myriad of choices consumers now have that didn’t exist a few years ago. Those choices will only grow and save people even more money thanks to companies like Venture Lighting and Lighting Science Group.

Better yet, pick up a basket full of energy efficient bulbs for your home and office, flip the switch and keep track of your electric bills at the end of each month. Then you’ll really see the light.

 

 

Follow Rocky Kistner on Twitter: www.twitter.com/rockyatnrdc

Deep in the heart of America’s rust belt a new generation of companies is riding a wave of job-creating lighting technologies as new federal lighting efficiency standards are...
Deep in the heart of America’s rust belt a new generation of companies is riding a wave of job-creating lighting technologies as new federal lighting efficiency standards are...
 
 
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05:57 PM on 01/10/2012
The commercial lighting retrofit industry is growing and rapidly changing field. Our firm has seen a 300% increase in the amount of lighting industry clients and alliances( we are specifically seeing LED Technologies go into more and more buildings that we qualify) . We have been able to create jobs locally and around the country through this surge. The Epact 179d Tax Deduction turned our full service MEP firm into a leading provider of Epact 179D Tax Deductions for energy efficient lighting retrofits and new construction.

David Diaz
www.WalkerReid.com
01:37 PM on 12/20/2011
Let's not forget the hazmat crew that will need to be hired to clean up the toxic mess if a bulb breaks. That's job creation for ya ;)
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
05:27 AM on 12/21/2011
Every commercial building using non-compact fluorescent lighting seems to cope fine.

Don't forget to inhale your mercury from the coal smoke that's being produced unnecessarily to power all those incandescent bulbs.
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4everright
My heart went boom
08:24 AM on 12/20/2011
everyone loves those made in china bulbs.
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dawgspiel
Never, never, never give up.
03:20 AM on 12/21/2011
Stockdale says the new bulb has already created new jobs for Americans, from the lighting engineers who worked on the new technology in Ohio to the people who make the new coating machines at its Santa Rosa plant. And he says the company hopes to create more jobs in places like Ohio as the “tipping point†in demand increases as the new energy efficiency lighting standards kick in next year.
Didn't read a word of the article, did ya?

The jobs are here. There are more of them. There are more choices in the types of lighting available, including incandescent bulbs that last twice as long and use 1/2 the electricity of the old style incandescents. 

IOW, government done done something right.

And I'm happy to ruin your evening.
09:56 PM on 12/19/2011
So basically we should ban things that work just fine so that we have to innovate to create the same product . . .
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
05:29 AM on 12/21/2011
If people won't voluntarily or economically change to the readily-available product that's 80% more efficient, then yes we should.

Should the building codes be abandoned, and people be allowed to raise their children in a log cabin?
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blurredmolly
Ipswich, Mass. 1641
07:43 PM on 12/19/2011
no wonder republicans are against energy efficient lighting.
05:34 PM on 12/19/2011
if a large enough tariff can be put on the chinese copies of our technology the jobs may actually last past the 2012 elections.
04:42 PM on 12/19/2011
"Despite Congressional Republicans' last minute efforts to undermine new light bulb efficiency standards"

This was the most telling part of the article the 'job creator' repubs attempting to block laws that create jobs. The are happy to protect the tax breaks for the 'job creators' but don't expect them to actually create jobs.
11:45 PM on 12/19/2011
You ban the old bulb, those people lose their jobs.

You mandate standards for a new bulb, people get hired to make the new bulb.

How many jobs are created in that scenario?
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gene40
Problem with political jokes they get elected
04:32 PM on 12/19/2011
Does the lighting industry actually expect lay people to understand all of this new lighting technology? It was so much easier when all you had to do was go to the electric company office and get 60 watt, 100 watt and 3-way bulbs for free. I'd like to know what ecological damage these mercury filled CFL lights are going to create down the road? LED's are still to expensive. We save energy but destroy the environment. Hardly a good trade off.
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alteredstory
Hold on to the center
07:37 PM on 12/19/2011
The amount of mercury in CFLs is dwarfed by the amount of mercury emitted in burning enough coal to make up the difference in energy between CFL and incandescent use.

If you're worried about mercury, you should be pushing to reduce electricity use, and get off of coal entirely.

I'm not sure how much you're actually worried though, since you haven't done the research.

On another note - if we don't get off of fossil fuels, we risk environmental destruction unlike anything seen since our ancestors looked like rats. I am not exaggerating. The biggest mass extinction in the history of life on earth was triggered by a sudden global warming event.

There's a reason we're not happy with the status quo.
04:00 PM on 12/19/2011
LED's are the future. They are longer lasting and use less energy.

Republicans seem to be against energy efficient light bulbs, energy efficient appliances and energy efficient cars and trucks. They seem to want individuals, businesses and the government to spend more money on energy costs for some reason. Could it be that they are supported by the oil and coal companies?

It is time to vote all Republicans out of office and let them see what it is like to be unemployed in America today.
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dmeekthemimi
07:17 PM on 12/19/2011
If you could afford LED's!! The CFL's make a yellow light, but if you get the CFL's that make a brighter light, they are called Sunlight, They cost an arm and a leg - almost $2.00 more apiece. And I have track lighting in my kitchen because I don't see well. I decided to check to see if they had LED's for it. The regular bulbs are 3/9.00 at Home Depot. The LED replacement is $25.00/bulb. The last time I checked, thats $175. I get 9 for the price of one LED, almost!! So, I have regular CFL's in most of the lighting, Sunlight in the bathrooms over the mirrors where you have to see to put on your make-up, in the lamps where I have to read, and the track loghts that are burned out - 4 of them, will be replaced when I have $18.00 to spare. If the government is serious about LED's, they need to give tax breaks or rebates for them. I'm on Social Security and can't afford the high price tags to do it alone.
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alteredstory
Hold on to the center
07:46 PM on 12/19/2011
Well, I don't know if you've looked at this or not, but I use $5 CFLs, turn of the lights when I'm not using them, and my power bill is literally half what the previous tenants payed. Two people who cook a lot and our monthly bill for ALL of our power usage (cooking, lighting, water, heating) comes to $50 or less per month.

We use one CFL in the bathroom, and there are a couple incandescents over the mirror that I have unscrewed. I screw them in when I shave, and that's enough light. Oh, and while I don't use makeup (being a non-crossdressing guy and all), I shave with a straight razor, so seeing what I'm doing is rather important, what with the whole "razor on throat" thing.

When I can get a 100 watt equivalent LED, I'll pay the extra for it, and just buy them over a period of time, and watch my power bill slowly go down some more :)
08:28 PM on 12/19/2011
Flat screen TV's were also very expensive when they first came out and now they are very inexpensive.

LED's will come down in price as factories ramp up production and begin to produce more.

Start with buying one or two bulbs and put them in the lights you use the most. Take the money you save after a year of using them and go buy two more the next year. You will save money in the long run and cut your electric bill.

Fuel efficient vehicles, energy saving appliances and insulating your home are all things that will pay you back in the long run. Yes you will pay a little more up front but it is what you save in the long run that counts. Short term thinking cost more in the long run.
11:50 PM on 12/19/2011
You will never understand the value of freedom until it's all gone.

Why is it the government's right or duty to tell me what light bulb to buy? Or you either.
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mrld20
03:47 PM on 12/19/2011
The only way for you Greens to be successful is to embrace the Red of socialism! You must embrace it!! If you want energy efficient lighting to be successful then embrace socialism! :DDD
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alteredstory
Hold on to the center
07:46 PM on 12/19/2011
um...

what?
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02:30 PM on 12/19/2011
i'm hoping for warm CFLs. i save my incandescents for when the heater is on anyway, seeing as that's where 95% of the energy goes anyway (vs. some 80% with CFLs). there's no comparing light warmth.
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alteredstory
Hold on to the center
07:47 PM on 12/19/2011
Using lightbulbs for heat is pretty inefficient compared to pretty much any heating system these days...
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11:51 PM on 12/19/2011
i don't understand how there's any kind of efficiency in electric heating. typically, anything not doing mechanical work is captured by resistance which must dissipate heat. in electric heating, resistance *is* the work, so heat is just a matter of how much electricity you're using.

all i know is, on the *low* setting, my portable heater is 700W. my lightbulb is 60W, and i get the nifty by-product of light.
02:12 PM on 12/19/2011
LED is the way to go.
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alteredstory
Hold on to the center
07:47 PM on 12/19/2011
Do you know a place to get bright, area-lighting LEDs? I'd love to get some, but most of the ones I can find are either spotlights or really dim.
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11:26 PM on 12/19/2011
Here is a 60 watt replacement (800 lumens) omni-directional LED bulb. This site has some other omni-directional LEDs as well.

http://store.earthled.com/products/lighting-science-definity-a19-omni-v2-led-bulb-dfn-a19-v2
10:38 AM on 12/20/2011
You can get 60 watt replacements that work great for about 10 bucks at most Lowes or Home depot.