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1
INEFFICIENT LAMP PHASE-OUT IN AUSTRALIA
Presentation toElectrical Leaders Forum
26 August 2008
Bryan DouglasChief Executive Officer
Lighting Council Australia
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A few words about Lighting Council…•Peak body for Australia’s lighting industry•56 member companies- luminaire manufacturers/suppliers- lamp suppliers- control gear manufacturers/suppliers- retailers•Formed in 2001 (part of AEEMA)•Incorporated as separate industry association November 2007
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Lamp phase-out in Australia
• In February 2007 Australian Government announced its intention to phase-out inefficient lamps – few details provided
• Second Ministerial announcement on World Environment Day 2008 (June 5)
• Ban on import November 2008, ban on sale November 2009
• Announcement supported by Lighting Council
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Trends in Energy Consumption fromElectrical AppliancesSource: Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts
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Scope of phase-out
Phase-out of inefficient lighting will apply to most lamp types:• Tungsten filament incandescent lamps (including GLS)• Tungsten halogen – low voltage and mains voltage• Reflector & non-reflector• Candle lamps, fancy round lamps and other decorative lamps
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Lamp phase-out in Australia
• Not technology specific - efficient incandescent lamps will be allowed• Must result in lower power lamps - success will be measured by this• Lamps will not be phased-out unless there is a more efficient and viable alternative available
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Initia l Lum inous Flux (lum e ns )
Init
ial E
ffic
ac
y (
lm/w
)
H a lo g e n EL V ca p su le (ca ta lo g u e )
H a lo g e n EL V IR C ca p su le (te st)
H a lo g e n EL V d ich ro ic (te st la b 2 )
H a lo g e n EL V d ich ro ic (te st la b 1 )
H a lo g e n M V n o n -re fle cto r (ca ta lo g u e )
GL S (ca ta lo g u e )
M EPS
Ed o re /Eco b o o st 2 0 w @ 2 3 0 v (te st)
H a lo g e n A @ 1 2 0 v (ca ta lo g u e )
H a lo g e n EL V d ich ro ic (IES)
H a lo g e n En e rg y Sa ve r (a p p ro x)
Phase-out Curve
Initial luminous flux (lumens)
Initi
al e
ffic
acy
(lm/W
)
So
urc
e:
De
pa
rtm
en
t o
f th
e E
nvi
ron
me
nt,
Wa
ter,
He
rita
ge
an
d t
he
Art
s
Phase 1: 2008-2014
Enforcement date for import Enforcement date forsale
Lamp products
November 2008 November 2009 GLSELV halogen non-reflectorCFLs
November 2009 November 2010 >40W candle, fancy round, decorative lamps
Mains voltage halogen non-reflector(G9 base excluded)ELV halogen reflector
November 2010 November 2011 CFL, refector
November 2011 November 2012 Mains voltage reflector lamps inchalogen (PAR, ER, R, etc)>25W candle, fancy round, decorative lamps
To be determined – date dependent on availability of efficient replacement product
To be determined – date dependent on availability of efficient replacement product
Pilot lamps 25Wand below
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Phase 1 – Government’s expectations
• Conventional GLS lamps effectively eliminated from Australian marketplace• Lower efficiency low voltage halogen lamps to be removed from market place• High quality CFLs dominate• Some halogen lamps remain
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Measurement Standards• Australian and New Zealand Interim Standards for incandescent lamps and CFLs have been published – http://www.saiglobal.com
• Based on international work with the intent to migrate to IEC Standards when available
• Standards will be incorporated into state regulations which control what products can be sold in Australia and New Zealand
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Measurement Standards
The standards will also later specify product marking requirements. While these have yet to be finalised, they may include:
- Statement of initial luminous flux, in lumens - Statement of initial efficacy, in lumens per Watt- Some details on size, attributes and location of marking on packaging
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Issues
1.Negative perceptions of CFLs
MEPS for CFLs specify quality requirements including:
• Start time• Lifetime• Lumen maintenance• Power factor• Colour (xy, CCT and CRI)• Mercury level• EMC
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Issues
2. Mercury
-Considerable international media attention on mercury in CFLs-Fails to recognise that linear fluorescents have been in operation for over 60 years-CFLs responsible for less mercury in environment because of their energy efficiency (burning coal releases mercury to atmosphere)-Hg quantity in modern CFLs very small – <5 mg (a single dental filling contains 60-200 times more Hg)-Commonwealth Government study on Hg in lamps will conclude later this year-Calls for ban on Hg lamps in landfill
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Issues
3. Other health concerns with CFLs
-Flicker, UV light, migraines, EMFs-Government claims scientific evidence indicates none of these issues should be a barrier to the phase-out – ubiquity of linear fluorescents-Non-fluorescent alternatives available
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Issues
4. Dimmed circuits
-Most current generation CFLs not compatible with 2 wire control devices (compatible CFLs are available, but expensive)-Consumers likely to complain when CFL fails in dimming circuit-Government relying on education campaign
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Future activities2009 onwards•Government will monitor lamp market to ensure no unintended outcomes (eg mains voltage halogen sales dominate CFLs)2011•Review of options for Phase 22013•20 lumens/W target2015•Phase 2 of incandescent MEPS – more stringent efficacy requirements eg 35 lumens/W2009-2019•Greenlight Australia v2 – blueprint for energy efficient lighting (likely to include MEPS for luminaires)