http://enews.penton.com/enews/powerquality/power_quality_news_beat/2007_march_16_march_16_2007/display

http://tinyurl.com/2orhxz


A recent article in the New York Times reports that a coalition of 
industrialists, environmentalists, and energy specialists is banding 
together to try to eliminate the incandescent light bulb in about 10 
years.

In a recently announced agreement, the coalition members, including 
Philips Lighting, the largest manufacturer of incandescent light 
bulbs; the Natural Resources Defense Council; and two efficiency 
organizations, are pledging to press for efficiency standards at the 
local, state, and federal levels. The standards would phase out the 
ordinary screw-in bulb, technology that arose around the time of the 
telegraph and the steam locomotive, and replace it with compact 
fluorescents, light-emitting diodes, halogen devices, and other 
technologies that may emerge.


The article goes on to say that the agreement is a compromise among 
the participants. Some favored an outright ban on incandescent bulbs, 
like the one Australia said last month it would seek by 2009 or 2010. 
Philips, a unit of Royal Philips Electronics of the Netherlands, has 
pledged with others doing business in Europe to seek a shift to more 
efficient lighting there, too.


The announcement commits coalition members to seek "a market phaseout" 
by 2016. General Electric, the largest American manufacturer of 
lighting, has recently been campaigning against the elimination of 
incandescent bulbs, and promising instead to bring out a new model 
that is twice as efficient as its current bulbs. The company is not 
part of the new coalition, but has allied itself with the Natural 
Resources Defense Council in another group called the United States 
Carbon Action Program, which seeks to control emissions of greenhouse 
gases through energy conservation.



xponent

A Good Idea Maru

rob


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