Anchorage, Alaska To Install 16,000 LED Streetlights
Another win for LED bulbs: Anchorage, Alaska plans to replace 16,000 streetlight fixtures—a quarter of all the streetlight fixtures in the city—with LEDs. The new streetlights will use 50% less energy than current fixtures, leading Anchorage to potential savings of $360,000 each year. The city has invested $2.2 million in the plan.
Since Anchorage has 85 days a year with less than 8 hours of sunlight, energy efficiency initiatives are critical to the city’s survival. With other programs currently in the works, they’re on the right track.
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Cree, a US-based LED component manufacturer, started the LED City program in 2007. The initiative is designed to test the economic, environmental, and usage benefits of LED lighting in cities around the world.
Other cities that have already committed to the LED City program include Raleigh, North Carolina; Toronto, Ontario; Tianjin, China, and Torraca, Italy.
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Austin, Texas is already using LED technology in, not just streetlamps, but also government buildings and other structures. This initiative is in addition to an amazing array of other programs to hopefully create one of the greenest, and energy efficiant cities in America. I don’t even live in Texas, but I admire Austin’s work. You can visit Austin’s home page to see more.
Is this a joke?
Anchorage could have saved even more money by not doing anything at all.
Anchorage switched all their street lights from mercury vapor to sodium vapor about 10 years ago. So it’s probably safe to say they’ll want to change them all to plasma or whatever the next greatest thing is in another 10 years or less. If they’ve already spent 2 million on the LEDs, which will only save an estimated 400K$ per year it’s probably safe to say they’ll spend another 2 million getting them all installed. According to my modest estimate, it would take 10 years just to recover the expense of the switch. But of course We’ll already be spending money on switching to something else by then.
Also remember that there will be snow on the ground. I believe that the white stuff will reflect the light pretty good. So these LED’s may not produce the same amt of light but it will be more than enough to do the job… As for not needing street lights. I suppose you can see the moose walking around… They are pretty dang big.
LEDs for outdoor lighting is some sort of bizarre. There are more efficient plasma bulbs that can be used for this applications.
The LEDs are a good way to save money anyway.
If they are using 50% less electricity by installing LED lights, I’d like to know what they were using before. They could use the same budget to convert at least twice as many fixtures to low pressure sodium, which are still far more efficient than LEDs. That way they’d save even more on their electricity bill.
As much as I am for energy efficiency, this is a very bad idea that was obviously not well thought through. Because LED lights are a low energy and low heat alternative to conventional traffic lights, they are perfect for many cities closer to the equator. However, when used in northern cities, such as any city in Alaska, they have a fatal flaw. They do not produce sufficient heat to melt snow and ice which forms on the surface of the light. This may result in large balls of snow and ice which may produce little or no light
The true white LED is not yet a reality… what is being used to produce “white” light is a blue LED and a secondary lense coated with phosphorous to give the appearance of “white lite…” The true white LED is estimated to be about one fifth of the wattage currently required by the faux white LED… When it hits the marketplace, there will be massive retrofitting and a fond farewell to the now widely used energy efficient T8 lamp and ballast…
on turning off lighting there are state and fed laws that govern how much lighting is needed per square foot.on led and cold weather the led heat sink on top will be between 30-50c when running.heat is the killer for led so the colder it is outside the better it is for the lights.
[...] in the U.S., New York City is testing LED streetlights complete with a new pole design, and Anchorage, Alaska is jumping into the pool by replacing one fourth of its entire streetlights with LED’s, a [...]