Search This Blog

Showing posts with label MERCURY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MERCURY. Show all posts

Monday, December 27, 2021

LIGHT BULBS: The World’s Greatest Light Bulb

 

THE ARTICLE BELOW IS FROM 2011. LED BULBS HAVE BECOME LESS EXPENSIVE AND THE OPTIONS AVAILABLE HAVE INCREASED.  


The World’s Greatest Light Bulb

Dump your fluorescents and incandescents for this amazing new LED bulb.

When I drove to the offices of a start-up called Switch Lighting last week, I wasn’t expecting much. A company representative had promised to show me something amazing—an alternative light bulb that uses a fraction of the energy of a traditional incandescent bulb and lasts 20 times as long, but that plugs into a standard socket and produces the same warm, yellowish, comforting glow that we’re all used to seeing when we flip the switch.

I’d heard that pitch before. Energy-efficient bulbs that shine like incandescents are the holy grail of the lighting industry. The effort has become more urgent in the last few years, as governments around the world have imposed regulations to phase out incandescent bulbs. In the United States, the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007, whose light bulb-related provisions will go into effect next year, requires greater efficiency from all light bulbs on the market; the act effectively outlaws the traditional incandescent bulb by 2014. The phase-out has created a surprising political outcry, with some people even stocking up on bulbs. That’s because today’s main alternative, compact-fluorescent bulbs, are awful. They’ve got three main shortcomings: They’re ugly; they contain mercury, which can be extremely hazardous if the bulbs are broken; and most importantly, they put out harsh, white light that many people (myself included) find unbearable.

Switch Lighting claims to have solved all of those problems. When I arrived at Switch, Brett Sharenow, the company’s chief strategy officer, showed me two lamps. Inside one was a standard 75-watt incandescent bulb. Switch’s 75-watt replacement bulb, which uses only 16 watts of power, was plugged into the other. The lampshades prevented me from seeing the bulbs directly—I couldn’t tell which lamp contained which bulb. When Sharenow turned on the lamps, the light from each lamp looked identical. The moment was completely undramatic, and that was the point. Switch has spent years developing bulbs that produce something thoroughly unexceptional—light that looks exactly like what we’re used to.

Turned off, a Switch bulb looks like an incandescent from the future. It’s got the same pear shape as a standard bulb, but it’s divided into two sections. The bottom half is composed of a wavy metallic structure that looks like the wings of a badminton birdie. Above that is a thick glass orb filled with a cooling agent and a bank of LEDs, which are semiconductors that produce light. Because LEDs use a fraction of the energy required to light up the filament in an incandescent bulb, they’re seen as the next great advance in light bulbs. LEDs have advantages over CFLs, too—they don’t contain dangerous chemicals, and they can be used in lamps with dimmer switches (only certain CFLs are dimmable). A host of start-ups, as well as many of the giants in the lighting industry, are working on LED bulbs that mimic incandescents. At the lighting industry’s annual trade show in Philadelphia in May, several companies showed off their LED technology. Switch was among a handful that unveiled prototypes of a 100-watt-equivalent LED bulb, which is considered a kind of tipping point for LEDs—if someone can make an LED bulb that looks as great as a 100-watt incandescent, the LED bulb will have finally arrived.

That seems increasingly likely. Switch will release its 60- and 75-watt equivalent bulbs to retailers in October, and its 100-watt-equivalent bulb will go on sale in December. There’s a small hitch, though: At the moment, only the 60- and 75-watt alternatives are available in “warm white,” the yellowish color that we associate with incandescents; the 100-watt-equivalent bulb will put out “neutral white,” a bluer color that more closely resembles the light from CFL bulbs. Switch will release a warm 100-watt-equivalent bulb sometime next year, Sharenow says. (The 60- and 75-watt-alternative bulbs are also available in neutral white, which Sharenow says is a popular color in many different places around the world—people in Japan, India, and other Asian countries can’t stand the yellow light we find comforting, Sharenow says.)

Switch’s 60-watt-replacement bulb will sell for about $20, and the 75-watt and 100-watt replacements will cost slightly more. This will be cheaper than other LED bulbs—Philips * sells a 60-watt replacement LED bulb that goes for about $45, for instance. But $20 for a light bulb still sounds expensive. Incandescent bulbs sell for about 50 cents to $1 per bulb, and CFL bulbs have been approaching that same low price. LED bulbs seem to break the bank by comparison.

But that’s only until you do the math. On average, an incandescent bulb lasts about 1,000 hours—that’s about a year, if you keep it on for about three hours a day. Electricity in America also costs about 11 cents per kilowatt hour (that’s the average; it varies widely by region). In other words, a 50-cent, 60-watt incandescent bulb will use about $6.60 in electricity every year. Switch’s 60-watt-equivalent LED, meanwhile, uses only 13 watts of power, so it will cost only $1.43 per year. The Switch bulb also has an average lifespan of 20,000 hours—20 years. If you count the price of replacing the incandescent bulb every year, the Switch bulb will have saved you money by its fourth year. Over 20 years, you’ll have spent a total of about $142 for the incandescent bulbs (for electricity and replacement bulbs) and less than $50 for Switch’s 60-watt bulb. (I made a spreadsheet showing my calculations.)

The problem, of course, is that people don’t buy light bulbs that way—a lot can happen in 20 years, and it seems silly to think of light bulbs as a long-term investment vehicle. (Also, neither Switch nor any other light bulb company guarantees that their bulbs will last that long.) Sharenow concedes this line of thinking, and he’s got two answers. First, he argues that as LEDs are mass-produced over time, their prices will plummet—he estimates that a year from now, Switch’s 60-watt-equivalent bulb will sell for under $15, and could hit $10 the year after that. At that price, Switch’s new bulbs will be much harder to resist. The other advantage is that Switch’s bulbs are beautiful—the company has already seen interest from hotels, department stores, and other companies that are happy to pay for high-end decor. These firms will save money on energy and replacement bulbs and look good doing it. And once we see these bulbs showing up in fancy shops and hotels, we may become much more interested in getting them for our homes.

Besides, we won’t have much choice. With traditional bulbs going away, we’re going to need some other source of light, and nobody likes CFLs. LEDs are the light bulbs of the future. And I’m putting my money—well, a little bit of my money—where my mouth is. I’m buying two of the Switch bulbs for the lamps in our living room. Based on the demo I saw, we’ll never notice the difference, at least until we get our utility bills at the end of the month.

Correction, July 6, 2011: This article originally misspelled the name of the electronics company Philips. (Return to the corrected sentence.)

LINK

Saturday, November 6, 2021

RSN: FOCUS: Juan Cole | Question for Joe Manchin After COP26: Why Isn't Coal - the New Blood Diamonds - Illegal, Now?

 


 

Reader Supported News
05 November 21

Live on the homepage now!
Reader Supported News

STARVING AMONGST SUPPORTERS: We have a very loyal, longstanding readership. Our subscribers morally support what we do and believe in our work. But here we sit among tens of thousands of our supporters with a significant funding shortfall. You have an opportunity now to get onboard.
Marc Ash • Founder, Reader Supported News

Sure, I'll make a donation!

 

Senator Joe Manchin. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty)
FOCUS: Juan Cole | Question for Joe Manchin After COP26: Why Isn't Coal - the New Blood Diamonds - Illegal, Now?
Juan Cole, Informed Comment
Cole writes: "We cannot go on burning coal like madmen into the 2030s if we are going to keep the earth's climate from becoming unstable because of all the global heating it causes."

Denise Chow at NBC News reports that on Thursday at the UN climate conference Cop26, some 23 new countries signed on to Britain’s push to phase out coal, the biggest source of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide. These included Poland, South Korea, Indonesia, Chile and Vietnam. Poland is the Saudi Arabia of coal and has been reluctant to turn to green energy because of the fear of losing jobs in the coal industry.

As Chow notes, the agreement is a pledge for the wealthier countries to end coal use in the 2030s, and for the poorer nations to end it in the 2040s.

Unfortunately, we cannot go on burning coal like madmen into the 2030s if we are going to keep the earth’s climate from becoming unstable because of all the global heating it causes.

Coal needs to be outlawed, yesterday.

Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia is a coal baron and has gone to bat against green energy proposals in Joe Biden’s Build Back Better bill in Congress on behalf of coal and other dangerous fossil fuels. Manchin has made millions off his coal investments, which is very much like making money off blood diamonds in Africa. The money may be beautiful sitting there in Manchin’s bank accounts, but it comes from killing people. Globally, some 5 million people a year are already dying from the increase in extreme heat caused by burning coal, gas and petroleum. That does not even take into account the people who die in other extreme weather events, from flooding to droughts to wildfires.

Holding coal investments is like holding investments in a consortium of mass murderers. Five million a year.

People who care about the kind of lives their children and grandchildren will live need to step up and mount more concerted campaigns to close the more than 200 coal-fueled electricity plants in the United States. Moreover, these facilities need to be replaced by wind, solar and hydro, not by natural gas, which is also a major source of carbon dioxide.

Air pollution, to which coal burning is a major contributor, kills 100,000 Americans annually, accounting for some 3% of deaths. Burning coal actually spews mercury into the environment. Mercury is a nerve poison. When a manufacturer makes a gadget that kills even 10 people, the government jumps all over it, and it has to do a recall and fix whatever is wrong with it.

This is not even counting all the extra deaths that the coal-driven climate emergency causes.

The coal industry gets away with killing millions. This is in part because they coal barons give money to the political campaigns of grifters like Joe Manchin. And no, he is not a nice guy. He is a high functioning sociopath. People like Manchin know that coal is doomed in the medium term and that it is deadly for the environment, they just want to make as much money from it as they can before it crashes.

If governments won’t act to close the coal plants on a short timetable, the people will increasingly take matters into their own hands. Around the world they have already been many demonstrations, rallies, and boycott campaigns targeting coal interests. As the baleful effects of global heating become more and more apparent– as our forests burn, our coasts flood and face level 6 hurricanes, our port cities submerge, our wildlife dies off en masse — people will turn on the merchants of death whose deadly products caused this mayhem.

Activists at COP26 dressed in giant Pikachu costumes called on Japan to dump coal.

In Australia, protesters pressured Deutsche Bank not to loan Whitehaven Coal $2 billion for expansion of its operations.

At another site in Australia, a Scottish protester cuffed herself to a conveyor belt at a coal plant to protest greenwashing at COP26, stopping operations for 4 hours. We are going to see more and more of this kind of thing, precisely because of the evils promulgated by people like Joe Manchin.

Already at COP26, many countries pledged to stop financing fossil fuel projects abroad.

READ MORE

 

Contribute to RSN

Follow us on facebook and twitter!

Update My Monthly Donation

PO Box 2043 / Citrus Heights, CA 95611







"Look Me In The Eye" | Lucas Kunce for Missouri

  Help Lucas Kunce defeat Josh Hawley in November: https://LucasKunce.com/chip-in/ Josh Hawley has been a proud leader in the fight to ...