According to the Xinhua News Agency, California, the United States, began to phase out 100-watt incandescent lamps on January 1 this year and used energy-saving lamps to replace the brightest lighting fixtures in many houses in more than a century.
One expert estimates that if other states in the United States follow the example of California, the effect of power saving is considerable.
California lighting manufacturers will no longer produce 100-watt incandescent lamps. After the store has sold out its inventory, it will no longer purchase. It will only sell lamps that do not exceed 72 watts, including halogen incandescent lamps, fluorescent lamps, and light emitting diode (LED) lamps.
This initiative aims to implement the Energy Independence and Security Act that came into force in 2007. California implements the national standards prescribed by the Act one year in advance.
The bill stipulates that, starting from 2012, the United States will phase out 100-watt traditional incandescent lamps and use 25% to 30% of energy-saving lamps to replace other traditional incandescent lamps of 75W, 60W, and 40W by 2014. Some special incandescent lamps are not eliminated, such as yellow light bulbs for safety tips and luminaires for aquariums.
According to experts, the elimination of incandescent bulbs across the United States can save $10 billion in electricity bills each year, and “power savings equal to the power generated by 30 large-scale power plants†can significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Energy-saving lamps are more expensive than traditional incandescent lamps. A traditional incandescent lamp sells 25 cents in California and an LED lamp sells for 20 dollars.
One expert estimates that if other states in the United States follow the example of California, the effect of power saving is considerable.
California lighting manufacturers will no longer produce 100-watt incandescent lamps. After the store has sold out its inventory, it will no longer purchase. It will only sell lamps that do not exceed 72 watts, including halogen incandescent lamps, fluorescent lamps, and light emitting diode (LED) lamps.
This initiative aims to implement the Energy Independence and Security Act that came into force in 2007. California implements the national standards prescribed by the Act one year in advance.
The bill stipulates that, starting from 2012, the United States will phase out 100-watt traditional incandescent lamps and use 25% to 30% of energy-saving lamps to replace other traditional incandescent lamps of 75W, 60W, and 40W by 2014. Some special incandescent lamps are not eliminated, such as yellow light bulbs for safety tips and luminaires for aquariums.
According to experts, the elimination of incandescent bulbs across the United States can save $10 billion in electricity bills each year, and “power savings equal to the power generated by 30 large-scale power plants†can significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Energy-saving lamps are more expensive than traditional incandescent lamps. A traditional incandescent lamp sells 25 cents in California and an LED lamp sells for 20 dollars.
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