Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Dimwits: Why 'green' lightbulbs aren't the answer to global warming
The Daily Mail ^ | 13th March 2007 | CHRISTOPHER BOOKER

Posted on 03/14/2007 5:08:22 PM PDT by fanfan

They have to be left on all the time, they're made from banned toxins and they won't work in half your household fittings. Yet Europe (and Gordon Brown) says 'green' lightbulbs must replace all our old ones.

Every day now we are being deluged with news of the latest proposals from our politicians about how to save the planet from global warming. We must have 'a new world order' to combat climate change, Gordon Brown proclaimed yesterday. We must have strict 'green' limits on air travel, proposes David Cameron, so that no one can afford to take more than one flight a year.

A fifth of all our energy must be 'green' by 2020, says the EU, even though there is no chance of such an absurd target being met. We must have 'green' homes, 'green' cars, 'green' fuel, even microchips in our rubbish bins to enforce 'green' waste disposal.

Have these politicians any longer got the faintest idea what they are talking about? Do they actually look at the hard, practical facts before they rush to compete with each other in this mad musical-chairs of gesture politics?

Take just one instance of this hysteria now sweeping our political class off its feet: that which was bannered across the Daily Mail's front page on Saturday in the headline 'EU switches off our old lightbulbs'.

This was the news that, as part of its latest package of planet-saving measures, the EU plans, within two years, to ban the sale of those traditional incandescent lightbulbs we all take for granted in our homes. Gordon Brown followed suit yesterday, saying he wanted them phased out in Britain by 2011.

No doubt the heads of government who took this decision (following the lead of Fidel Castro's dictatorship in Cuba) purred with selfcongratulation at striking such a daring blow against global warming.

After all, these 'compact fluorescent bulbs' (or CFLs), to which they want us all to switch, use supposedly only a fifth of the energy needed by the familiar tungsten-filament bulbs now to be made illegal.

Among the first to congratulate the EU's leaders was UK Green MEP Caroline Lucas, who claimed that 'banning old-fashioned lightbulbs across the EU would cut carbon emissions by around 20 million tonnes per year and save between e5 million and e8million per year in domestic fuel bills'.

Who could argue? Certainly one lot of people far from impressed by the EU's decision are all those electrical engineers who have been clutching their heads in disbelief. Did those politicians, they wondered, actually take any expert advice before indulging in this latest planet- saving gesture?

In fact, the virtues of these 'low-energy' bulbs are nothing like so wonderful as naive enthusiasts like Ms Lucas imagine them to be. Indeed in many ways, the experts warn, by banning incandescent bulbs altogether, the EU may have committed itself to an appallingly costly blunder.

It is a decision that will have a far greater impact on all our lives than most people are yet aware, presenting the UK alone with a bill which, on our Government's own figures, could be £3 billion or more.

The result will provide a quality of lighting which in many ways will be markedly less efficient. Even Angela Merkel, the German Chancellor who put forward the proposal, admitted that, because the energy-saving bulbs she uses in her flat take some time to warm up, she often has 'a bit of a problem' when she is looking for something she has 'dropped on the carpet'.

But even more significantly, because they must be kept on so much longer to run efficiently, the actual amount of energy saved by these bulbs has been vastly exaggerated.

So what are the disadvantages of CFLs over the traditional bulbs we will no longer be allowed to buy? Quite apart from the fact that the CFLs are larger, much heavier and mostly much uglier than familiar bulbs - and up to 20 times more expensive - the vast majority of them give off a harsher, less pleasant light.

Because they do not produce light in a steady stream, like an incandescent bulb, but flicker 50 times a second, some who use them for reading eventually find their eyes beginning to swim - and they can make fast-moving machine parts look stationary, posing a serious safety problem.

Fluorescent CFLs cannot be used with dimmer switches or electronically-triggered security lights, so these will become a thing of the past. They cannot be used in microwaves, ovens or freezers, because these are either too hot or too cold for them to function (at any temperature above 60C degrees or lower than -20C they don't work),

More seriously, because CFLs need much more ventilation than a standard bulb, they cannot be used in any enclosed light fitting which is not open at both bottom and top - the implications of which for homeowners are horrendous.

Astonishingly, according to a report on 'energy scenarios in the domestic lighting sector', carried out last year for Defra by its Market Transformation Programme, 'less than 50 per cent of the fittings installed in UK homes can currently take CFLs'. In other words, on the Government's own figures, the owners of Britain's 24 million homes will have to replace hundreds of millions of light fittings, at a cost upwards of £3billion.

In addition to this, lowenergy bulbs are much more complex to make than standard bulbs, requiring up to ten times as much energy to manufacture. Unlike standard bulbs, they use toxic materials, including mercury vapour, which the EU itself last year banned from landfill sites - which means that recycling the bulbs will itself create an enormously expensive problem.

Perhaps most significantly of all, however, to run CFLs economically they must be kept on more or less continuously. The more they are turned on and off, the shorter becomes their life, creating a fundamental paradox, as is explained by an Australian electrical expert Rod Elliott (whose Elliott Sound Products website provides as good a technical analysis of the disadvantages of CFLs as any on the internet).

If people continue switching their lights on and off when needed, as Mr Elliott puts it, they will find that their 'green' bulbs have a much shorter life than promised, thus triggering a consumer backlash from those who think they have been fooled.

But if they keep their lights on all the time to maximise their life, CFLs can end up using almost as much electricity from power stations (creating CO2 emissions) as incandescent bulbs - thus cancelling out their one supposed advantage.

In other words, in every possible way this looks like a classic example of kneejerk politics, imposed on us not by our elected Parliament after full consultation and debate, but simply on the whim of 27 politicians sitting around that table in Brussels, not one of whom could have made an informed speech about the pluses and minuses of what they were proposing.

Even if it does have the effect of reducing CO2 emissions, those reductions will be utterly insignificant when compared with emissions from China, for example, which is growing so fast it is using half the world's cement, 30 per cent of the world's coal, one quarter of copper production and 35 per cent of steel.

There was not a hint of democracy in this crackpot decision, which will have a major impact on all our lives, costing many of us thousands of pounds and our economy billions - all to achieve little useful purpose, while making our homes considerably less pleasant to live in.

Such is the price we are now beginning to pay for the ' ecomadness' which is sweeping through our political class like a psychic epidemic. The great 'Euro-bulb blunder' is arguably the starkest symbol to date of the crazy new world into which this is leading us.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: algore; cfls; climatechange; electricity; energy; envirowhackos; eu; globalwarming
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 41-6061-8081-100101-116 last
To: ModelBreaker
But we aren't serious. Instead, we are going to spend an incredible amount of money producing ethanol, which will have almost no net energy effect, except to make our cars run less efficiently.

I though I was the only one on FR who thought ethanol was just another way the government had of transferring wealth.

101 posted on 03/16/2007 7:42:37 AM PDT by from occupied ga (Your most dangerous enemy is your own government)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 27 | View Replies]

To: from occupied ga

At this point, I'm not convinced of the superiority of CFLs.

I think global warming may be happening. The Martian polar ice caps are melting at an alarming rate. Who let Rove loose with the Martian weather machine again.

I say screw the Martians. I'm gonna drive my Lincoln Town Car without guilt. I'm actually going to enjoy the ride.


102 posted on 03/16/2007 8:50:50 AM PDT by MichiganConservative (America: land of the sheep, home of the slaves)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 100 | View Replies]

To: from occupied ga

I thought ethanol might be a better alternative for a while. Then I learned more about the technical aspects of it. Seems like a load of crap now.

I heard old Jorge on TV the other day saying that ethanol would be as cheap or cheaper than regular gasoline since the gov. will help subsidize it. As if I'm so stupid I don't know what "government subsidy" means.

The current push for ethanol among politicians is just another in a long line of screwings of the American sheeple.


103 posted on 03/16/2007 8:55:40 AM PDT by MichiganConservative (America: land of the sheep, home of the slaves)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 101 | View Replies]

To: MichiganConservative
CFL: I agree that they're not superior. They have their good points and bad points, but their ability to catch on fire when placed in a fixture that worked OK with incandescent is almost a deal breaker

Ethanol as motor fuel is a fraud that at worst consumes more fossil fuel energy than it replaces and at best give you about a 4% net gain (depending on whose study you believe) The inflated 30% net gain figures are arrived at counting the value of the byproducts such as cattle feed. This is a bogus way to do it since if you're after energy, only the energy portion counts.

Bob Dole was big on the ethanol bandwagon to pay off the ADM investors who helped finance his campaigns

104 posted on 03/16/2007 9:01:20 AM PDT by from occupied ga (Your most dangerous enemy is your own government)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 103 | View Replies]

To: from occupied ga

Another thing about ethanol as fuel: from what I've read, if you want your engine to run as efficiently on that as on gasonline, you'll need a significantly higher compression engine. That and the fact that there's less energy to be had per gallon compared to regular gasoline with your current engine sort of defeat the "cheaper" part of the argument.

I think that might have been some understatement on my part regarding CFL. I'm definitely going to keep your story in mind when buying bulbs. Burning my place down is not an acceptable alternative to spending a few more dollars on electricity.


105 posted on 03/16/2007 9:09:40 AM PDT by MichiganConservative (America: land of the sheep, home of the slaves)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 104 | View Replies]

To: MichiganConservative
Another thing about ethanol as fuel: from what I've read, if you want your engine to run as efficiently on that as on gasonline, you'll need a significantly higher compression engine

It's more complicated than that. Etoh only has about 2/3 of the energy per gallon that gas has, so you just can't get as good a fuel mileage since driving down the road uses energy and the energy isn't there to get.

The compression determines the thermodynamic efficiency of the engine with higher compression getting higher efficiency. The upper limit for 87 octane compression is about 10:1 after that you get detonation rather than burning and the engine doesn't work. With Etoh you can go to 19:1 compression, but the compression efficiency curve isn't linear, so you only get about 15% increase in efficiency running on an engine designed for 19:1 compression AND you have to burn pure etoh. If you want high compression efficiency go to diesel these typically have 22:1 compression and run on a fuel that actually has MORE energy (about 7%) than gasoline.

The real answer to arab oil independence ins't in etoh, but a combination of more US resources and if someone wants alternative fuel, coal synfuel (diesel mostly) made by the Fischer Tropsh process can work a lot better than ethanol (but of course it uses COAL and this makes the coal miners richer not the greenie weenies who invested in pacific ethanol or the multiple farm states who have an entire economy build on federal subsidies)

106 posted on 03/16/2007 9:40:52 AM PDT by from occupied ga (Your most dangerous enemy is your own government)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 105 | View Replies]

To: from occupied ga
I though I was the only one on FR who thought ethanol was just another way the government had of transferring wealth.

Nope. It is painfully obvious to anyone but farmers, politicians buying farmers votes, and folks who would desperately like ethanol to work as an alternative to hugo and the mohammeds.

107 posted on 03/16/2007 10:25:04 AM PDT by ModelBreaker
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 101 | View Replies]

To: fanfan

I've had CFL in my house since they came out in the 90s(?) They last longer and they use less electricity. I've got the bills to prove it.

On the other hand, I use incandescents in three places where I need instant light that is a different color.

CFL's make sense. LED lights will be better. I'm a big proponent of many things considered 'green', but I don't want the government to make me do something. That is what prices are for, to help the public make decisions.

this movement is scary. In Boston, they now require all commercial buildings to have LEED certification. (www.usgbc.org) At the USGBC (United States Green Building Council) conference last fall in Denver, one speaker suggested that people be sued if they do not follow their guidelines. I was in the room and heard it.

The ramifications of that statement are pretty scary.


108 posted on 03/16/2007 10:34:54 AM PDT by cowtowney
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: VOA
Interesting site, but they compare a 60 watt lightbulb at about 660 lumens to a 31 lumen LED lamp. That is hardly the same thing.

Still, LED lamps do look promising for many applications.
109 posted on 03/16/2007 11:05:45 AM PDT by gtk
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 31 | View Replies]

To: gtk

The whole way of thinking about light will change.

The 660 lumens are spread in all directions while the LED is focused, so that the intensity of the light is much greater. The characteristic of LED lighting is that it only lights what needs to be lit -- and not everything else around it.

It's like the power of the laser; it only cuts what it touches -- leaving everything else untouched. It turns light into a precision instrument instead of the crude one the Edison bulbs represent. That's why we need to make a leap forward.

We're heading in this direction in all aspects of our lives. Even space can be optimized so that a person can live and work in a very small area, with only a few tools -- like a laptop and cell phone and be an entire industry.

The most basic of tools is the light wave/particle.


110 posted on 03/16/2007 3:47:42 PM PDT by MikeHu
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 109 | View Replies]

To: from occupied ga
CAUTION: Although they are only 23 watts, they do overheat and fail in some fixtures that were designed for incandescent bulbs (as the article said - poorly ventilated fixtures). Sometimes the failures are nasty as in my kitchen fixture where one of them actually started burning. The electronics in the base are not as resistant to high temperatures as an ordinary incandescent bulb.

Another point that needs to be reinforced with this: Do not operate CFL units in the same enclusure as incandescent bulbs. Although replacing leaving one incandescent in a three-bulb fixture along with two CFLs may give nicer light than using three CFLs, the heat given off by the incandescent will likely destroy the CFLs in short order.

111 posted on 03/16/2007 4:09:32 PM PDT by supercat (Sony delenda est.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 100 | View Replies]

To: meyer
The color temperature as shown in degrees K (kelvin) relates to the color of the output light.

Color temperature is a means of specifying whether light is reddish, bluish, or neutral, but it doesn't really imply anything about spectral quality. One could achieve a seemingly "white" light by combining in proper balance the output of suitably-chosen blue and yellow LEDs, but even though the light itself looked reasonably white, the colors of any objects illuminated by it would be way off. Some green objects may look yellow, others blue, others dark, and others light, but none would look green. Even if all the green objects looked similar under daylight, their appearance under a bi-spectral "pseudo-white" light could be totally different (note: this could be useful for adding anti-counterfeiting features to currency).

One thing I'd like to see in a review of fluorescent lamps would be a comparison of their spectral plots. A computer display isn't going to produce a spectrum that matches a fluorescent lamp, but a spectral plot could show the spectrum anyway.

112 posted on 03/16/2007 4:19:12 PM PDT by supercat (Sony delenda est.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 94 | View Replies]

To: supercat
Ok thanks, that answers my question. I'm willing to risk premature failure but not a fixture fire. They should be more explicit on the packaging.
113 posted on 03/16/2007 8:05:33 PM PDT by this_ol_patriot (I saw manbearpig and all I got was this lousy tagline.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 98 | View Replies]

To: flashbunny
I agree that LEDs hold real promise, but I don't believe it will be all that long before we see household LED lighting.

I use LED lights in my camp trailer and it extends the amount of time I can run on battery power by a couple days.

But I'm not scared of CFLs either. I have found that some don't work in odd positions, and they wouldn't work at all in my light/motion sensor porch light, but I replaced the fixture with one made for the push in CFLs - it works great and IIRC it was less than 20 bones. CFLs also last a long time in the ceiling fan.

And you can get them cheap. I just grab a few when I see them on clearance somewhere, sometimes less than a dollar each.
114 posted on 03/18/2007 8:30:02 PM PDT by Clinging Bitterly (Oregon - a pro-militia and firearms state that looks just like Afghanistan .)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: from occupied ga

LOL!


115 posted on 03/23/2007 7:48:59 PM PDT by traviskicks (http://www.neoperspectives.com/Ron_Paul_2008.htm)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 100 | View Replies]

To: fanfan

We only use this for a few outside lights that we like to leave on continuously.

Otherwise, we tried them in our house and stopped using them. We turn our lights off when not using them, and the constant on and off made them last perhaps as long as regular lights.


116 posted on 03/23/2007 7:52:55 PM PDT by sitetest (If Roe is not overturned, no unborn child will ever be protected in law.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 41-6061-8081-100101-116 last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson