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2009-12-12 11:57:35
By Ruth Alexander
BBC's More or Less
Save the planet, switch to eco-light bulbs. So goes the refrain. But are these
as bright, long-lasting and energy efficient as is often claimed?
The traditional incandescent bulb is on the way out. European law means people
will be encouraged to use longer-lasting, energy-efficient lights instead.
But many remain unconvinced that the common alternative - compact fluorescent
lamps (CFLs) - are up to the job.
European legislation has already banned the manufacture and import of 100-watt
incandescent bulbs. In 2011, 60-watt bulbs will go, and 40- and 25-watt bulbs
will be banned by 2012.
But are these bulbs quite as good as is claimed?
BRIGHTNESS
Think those compact fluorescent bulbs are not as bright as the old-style lights
they replaced? You are probably not imagining it.
A guide to the amount of light given by a CFL bulb is given on its box as a
comparison to the wattage of an incandescent bulb. But the European Commission
says
this can be misleading.
"Currently, exaggerated claims are often made on the packaging about the light
output of compact fluorescent lamps - for example that an 11-12-watt compact
fluorescent lamp would be the equivalent of a 60-watt incandescent, which is
not true."
The Lighting Industry Federation says the claims on the packaging are the
nearest equivalent to the wattage of a soft white light bulb.
Liz Peck, of the Society of Light and Lighting, says this is because CFLs have
a phosphor coating. "They compare like for like, but the trouble is people tend
to use the clear bulbs at home and it's not equivalent to those."
The European Commission's advice is to divide the wattage of a traditional
light bulb by four to get the equivalent brightness. So, to get the brightness
of a traditional 60-watt bulb, choose a 15-watt CFL bulb.
But the Lighting Research Center in the United States goes further.
"We believe in the divide by three rule," says associate director Russell
Leslie, who recommends a 20-watt CFL to match a 60-watt incandescent bulb. "The
equivalent ratings you see on the box are usually got by testing in a
laboratory environment."
At home, brightness varies as conditions change. "A compact fluorescent light
is designed to provide maximum light output at 25C, and when it gets hotter or
colder than that, its brightness can be reduced.
"If your bulb is in a recessed fixture in the ceiling, and it gets warm, you
might see a 10-20% reduction in its light output."
And studies show CFL bulbs can get 20% dimmer over time.
New European regulations expected next year mean manufacturers will have to
display lumens - a measure of light output - more prominently than wattage on
bulb packaging.
LIFESPAN
Another complaint is eco bulbs - supposed to last for years - frequently conk
out early.
"Unfortunately you get what you pay for," says Ms Peck. While a branded bulb
from a well-known manufacturer may indeed last the promised 10 years, one from
a supermarket budget line may not.
But even branded bulbs don't always last as long as expected - this is because
the lifespan given is an average.
When a batch of bulbs is tested, they are turned on for three hours, then off
for 20 minutes over and over again until half the batch fails. This point in
time is then decreed the average life.
It is often 10,000 hours. As no-one adds up the hours a light is on over its
lifespan, this is translated as 10 years, on the assumption that the bulb will
be on for an average of three hours a day.
But as half the bulbs will fail before 10,000 hours, a shopper may be unlucky
enough to pick a dud that will fail after just 2,000 hours. However, the main
manufacturers do their best to make bulbs that cluster around the average life
mark, says the Lighting Industry Federation.
And what you do with a bulb can affect its lifespan, says Mr Leslie.
Continuously turning it off and on every 15 minutes, for example, will more
than halve its expected lifespan.
ENERGY EFFICIENCY
Just how energy efficient are these lights? The European Commission, the Energy
Savings Trust and manufacturers say CFLs use up to 80% less electricity than
traditional bulbs.
How is this number calculated? It's worked out by comparing the best compact
fluorescent lamp's wattage with the wattage of an equivalent incandescent bulb,
says a spokeswoman for the European Commission.
But that results in a 5:1 energy ratio between the two - a claim it says is an
exaggeration when manufacturers use it.
And it's the "up to" in this 80% claim that is important. The EC spokeswoman
says the saving can be as low as 60%.
John Henderson, an energy-use expert from the consultancy Building Research
Establishment, says although CFLs are better than traditional bulbs,
policy-makers should not draw simple conclusions from simple sums about their
energy saving potential.
"When you see an 80% savings figure on the side of a low-energy light bulb, it
doesn't actually mean that you're going to save 80% lighting energy, 80% carbon
emissions, and 80% costs."
Traditional bulbs expend about 95% of their energy producing heat. The European
Commission considers this to be heat loss. But Mr Henderson disagrees.
"Let's say your house uses 1,000kWh a year to produce the light you use. If you
were to replace all the old-fashioned light bulbs with the modern low energy
lamps, you might expect an 80% reduction - 800kWh.
"However you'd find about 60% of that 800kWh would get automatically chucked
back in by your thermostat-controlled heating system. A typical heating system
is only about 75% efficient. So the actual figure you end up with is more like
240kWh a year, rather than the 800kWh you expected."
That number is only a rough guide, as most homes have gas central heating which
is cheaper and less carbon intensive than an electric heating system.
Meanwhile, the Institute of Lighting Engineers is considering changing its
estimate of the energy savings represented by CFLs from 80% to 70%.
This is because the power factor of CFLs is low, which means a utility company
needs to use more energy to get these lights to work, which can also cause
disruptions in the power network.
Ms Peck, of the Society of Light and Lighting, says CFLs have improved in
recent years - they flicker less, and warm up faster. Nor should people worry
that they contain mercury, as it is a very small amount.
There are other energy-saving options, she says, such as halogen tungsten
lights which are about 30% more efficient than incandescent bulbs.
And technology is developing fast, so it could be only a few years before
people are lighting their homes with LED lights, which experts say have the
potential to be more efficient than CFLs.
electrical connection from base to the filament
FLUORESCENT LAMP 'Energy saving light bulb'
[UV] light