We've had lots of intriguing discussion on this topic.  The idea that by 
replacing all your incandescent lights with LEDs, you can save enough energy 
to run an EV sounds like it ought to be pretty compelling.

And it might be for those of us who already have an interest in EVs.  What 
about for folks whose main concerns with a vehicle are whether it can accept 
car infant seats, carry all the rest of the family, and provide enough 
cupholders?

Statistics mean nothing to real world consumers.  Ask any advertising 
researcher -- of course they don't consider themselves average!  You can 
tell them all day long that the average person drives 35 miles a day (which 
is over 12,000 miles per year).  Doesn't matter.  They still think that 100 
miles of EV range can't possibly be enough for them.

So is there a way we can convince them that FOR THEM, replacing all their 
incandescent bulbs with LEDs would pay for an EV's electricity?

Well, maybe.  How about something like the online solar energy calculators?  
I haven't used one for a while, but IIRC at least some ask you to enter your 
kWh usage from your electric bills for a year, and where you live (for 
rates, insolation, and incentives).  Then they try to estimate how long a PV 
system's payback would be for you.

That might work for the "LEDs pay for the EV's energy" argument, IF you 
could get enough people to care enough to spend the time with your 
calculator.  

But even if you could, I see one more big problem:  Who has all incandescent 
bulbs any more anyway?  Who even has very many of them left?

There may be a scant few houses left with nothing but incandescents, but 
compact fluorescent retrofits have been pretty cheap now for something close 
to a decade.  LEDs really started becoming affordable about 5 years ago.  

At your average home center or supermarket, all of the "light bulb" displays 
were mostly CFs by about 2012.  Today they're almost all LEDs, with a few 
CFs on the lower shelves.  

You have to look hard to find old fashioned incandescent bulbs.  I suspect 
that the only people who put forth that effort are the muttering whackos who 
think that CFs and LEDs are some kind of "deep state" mind-control 
conspiracy.  And they've stockpiled incadescents anyway.  :-(

Unless you've been away overseas with your house closed up for a decade or 
two, chances are that -- even if you're not all that "green" -- your home 
already has a mixture of incandescent, compact fluorescent, and LED bulbs. 
Incandescents that are used daily burn out fast, and get replaced with 
modern CF or LED retrofits.  

So, most folks have already harvested much of that savings in energy and 
costs.  That horse has left the building, to blatantly mix my metaphors.

For something like this argument to hit home and get them off their duffs, 
they have to able to nod and think, "Sure, that makes sense for us."  
Whether it's accurate or not, does "LEDs pay for the EV's energy" really do 
that, do you think?

David Roden - Akron, Ohio, USA
EVDL Administrator

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