“It is fit-and-forget-lighting that is essentially there for as long as you
live,” said Colin Humphreys, a researcher at Cambridge University
To change the bulbs in the 60-foot-high ceiling lights of Buckingham
Palace’s grand stairwell, workers had to erect scaffolding and cover precious
portraits of royal forebears.
Jeffrey Sauger for The New York Times
Steffeni Hottenstein worked on an LED light in Ann Arbor. So when a
lighting designer two years ago proposed installing light emitting diodes or
LEDs, an emerging lighting technology, the royal family readily assented. The
new lights, the designer said, would last more than 22 years and enormously
reduce energy consumption and carbon dioxide emissions — a big plus for Prince
Charles, an ardent environmentalist. Since then, the palace has installed the
lighting in chandeliers and on the exterior, where illuminating the entire
facade uses less electricity than running an electric teakettle.
In shifting to LED lighting, the palace is part of a small but
fast-growing trend that is redefining the century-old conception of lighting,
replacing energy-wasting disposable bulbs with efficient fixtures that are often
semi-permanent, like those used in plumbing.
Studies suggest that a complete conversion to the lights could decrease
carbon dioxide emissions from electric power use for lighting by up to 50
percent in just over 20 years; in the United States, lighting accounts for about
6 percent of all energy use. A recent report by McKinsey & Company cited
conversion to LED lighting as potentially the most cost effective of a number of
simple approaches to tackling global warming using existing technology.
LED lighting was once relegated to basketball scoreboards, cell phone
consoles, traffic lights and colored Christmas lights. But as a result of rapid
developments in the technology, it is now poised to become common on streets and
in buildings, as well as in homes and offices. Some American cities, including
Ann Arbor, Mich., and Raleigh, N.C., are using the lights to illuminate streets
and parking garages, and dozens more are exploring the technology. And the
lighting now adorns the conference rooms and bars of some Renaissance hotels, a
corridor in the Pentagon and a new green building at Stanford.
LEDs are more than twice as efficient as compact fluorescent bulbs,
currently the standard for greener lighting. Unlike compact fluorescents, LEDs
turn on quickly and are compatible with dimmer switches. And while fluorescent
bulbs contain mercury, which requires special disposal, LED bulbs contain no
toxic elements, and last so long that disposal is not much of an issue.
“It is fit-and-forget-lighting that is essentially there for as long as
you live,” said Colin Humphreys, a researcher at Cambridge University who works
on gallium nitride LED lights, which now adorn structures in Britain.
The switch to LEDs is proceeding far more rapidly than experts had
predicted just two years ago. President Obama’s stimulus package, which offers
money for “green” infrastructure investment, will accelerate that pace, experts
say. San Jose, Calif., plans to use $2 million in energy-efficiency grants to
install 1,500 LED streetlights.
Thanks in part to the injection of federal cash, sales of the lights in
new “solid state” fixtures — a $297 million industry in 2007 — are likely to
become a near-billion-dollar industry by 2013, said Stephen Montgomery, director
of LED research projects at Electronicast, a California consultancy. And after
years of resisting what they had dismissed as a fringe technology, giants like
General Electric and Philips have begun making LEDs.