Cree LED Revolution Blog

Cree and LED lighting are starting a revolution

City of Asheville: Successfully Driving the Adoption of Street Lights in North Carolina

Monday, January 23rd, 2012

Being a leader can be exhilarating. Take Cree, for example. We love leading the LED Lighting Revolution. You could even say we find it electrifying. So when we hear US cities, like Asheville, are implementing LED lighting, it pumps us up!

The City of Asheville has initiated North Carolina’s first large-scale deployment of LED street lights. This large-scale deployment, made possible through a grant from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, allows Asheville to take the necessary steps to improve energy efficiency and reduce its overall carbon footprint.

Street Lights in Asheville, North Carolina

In the initial phase of the project, completed in June 2011, 730 street lights were replaced with 67-watt to 195-watt LEDway® luminaires. An additional 2,913 LEDway® street lights are currently being installed, and the City anticipates saving 50 percent of current energy use and maintenance costs due to the LED upgrade.

“Upgrading to LED street lights allows us to decrease energy consumption, increase energy efficiency and contribute to the sustainability of our community,” said Maggie Ullman, energy coordinator for the Asheville Office of Sustainability. “This exciting initiative helps affirm Asheville’s role as a leader in carbon footprint reduction.”

Street Lights in Asheville, North Carolina

Here are just some of the benefits of the Asheville installation project:

  • By upgrading all HPS and mercury vapor street lights to LEDway® luminaires, the City anticipates a savings of approximately $260,000 per year from the combined energy and maintenance savings.
  • Phase one of the LEDway® luminaires installation reduces the City’s carbon footprint by an estimated one percent and saves approximately $45,000 in energy cost per year.

In addition to saving energy, this installation demonstrates how municipalities and local utilities can work together. “As more municipalities commit to replacing outdated, inefficient lighting with the support of their local utilities, LED adoption and consumer awareness continue to increase,” said Christopher Ruud, President of Ruud Lighting, a Cree Company. “We applaud the City of Asheville and Progress Energy for working together for the benefit of its citizens demonstrating the growing trend of cities and municipalities working together to join the LED lighting revolution.”

Is your city taking the necessary steps to install LED lighting? Tell us about it.

SLM IP66 Wins Building Operating Management Top Products Award

Friday, January 6th, 2012

Cree is proud to announce that it has been selected as a recipient of the Building Operating Management magazine’s Top Products awards. The Top Products Awards recognize the most popular manufacturers and suppliers of the year. The award was given to Cree for the SLM™ IP66 area luminaire featuring BetaLED® technology.

Building and facility executives participated in a national survey and chose the winners from 557 possible products, making this award a veritable popularity contest. Readers were asked to select their choices for Top Products awards that met the criteria of innovation and usefulness to facility managers. Based on reader votes, 73 products were selected as Top Products winners and the SLM IP66 area luminaire featuring BetaLED® technology was one of the winners. The SLM IP66 area luminaire will be featured in this month’s issue of Building Operating Management (BOM) as a Top Products Award Winner.

Building Operating Management Top Product Award 2012

Cree’s SLM IP66 area luminaire featuring BetaLED® technology has a distinctive, slim, low-profile design and offers architectural character for exterior applications. The combination of a unique modular design with light bar scalability and patented NanoOptic® technology contributes to exceptional lighting performance and reduced energy use.

This low-maintenance area luminaire significantly reduces energy consumption compared to traditional lighting technology and provides optimum target illumination performance—that means the light goes where you want it, and not where you don’t. The unique design of the SLM IP66 lends to maintaining lower operating temperatures that can contribute to the longevity of the luminaire and the light bar-based design means the light levels of the luminaire can be scaled for the specific application. The SLM IP66 luminaire is designed with the total systems approach, integrating best-in-class LED packages, driver technology, optics and style. Extended operating life and exceptional lumen maintenance are achieved in a range of environmental conditions.

We’re proud that the readers of BOM selected the SLM IP66 as a Top Product. Want more information? Check out http://www.betaled.com/us-en/TechnicalLibrary/TechnicalDocuments/BetaLED-SLM-IP66.aspx.

High Maintenance Lighting? I’ll Pass

Thursday, December 15th, 2011

Being called “high maintenance” is probably something most of us would rather avoid, but compared to LED luminaires that’s exactly how High Intensity Discharge (HID) lighting solutions could be described.

Unlike LED luminaires that can provide more than a decade of near maintenance-free sustained illumination, HID systems require much more maintenance over such time frames. The main reason for the differing maintenance needs between the two technologies is differences in the rate of lumen depreciation or the rate at which a light source loses light output over time. While LED luminaires can be designed to have a very low rate of lumen depreciation that eliminates the need to re-lamp over their intended application lives, HID solutions are unable to avoid re-lamping cycles and the associated costs that come along with such required maintenance.

A lighting design process is an effective tool that incorporates product specific lumen maintenance predictions for a given source technology to help predict some level of sustained illumination performance into the future. Lighting designs also assume that the lighting system selected will be properly maintained to avoid illumination levels that fall below their original design intent. For even the best HID sources, it typically means re-lamping every two years for a normal dusk-to-dawn system that operates daily. Should you decide to delay re-lamping you have, in effect, decided to dip below the minimum illumination levels that you had originally set out to deliver. It also means an increase in random lamp outages as lamps begin to burnout at a much faster rate and low light levels increasingly become no light levels.

Unfortunately as budgets become tighter it seems easier to delay or simply eliminate group re-lamping altogether as a means to save money. This, unfortunately, comes at the expense of safety and quality of life concerns.

LED luminaires offer a better solution. In addition to the potential for significant energy savings, there is also the opportunity to significantly reduce maintenance-related expense. These combined savings can help avoid some of the tough budget decisions we face today.

So although we may not always have a choice in terms of avoiding “high maintenance” people, we definitely can avoid the “high maintenance” lighting systems of the past by incorporating LED solutions today.

How are you being proactive and avoiding possible maintenance issues? Share your story.

Trust, but verify: Reducing Risk Prior to LED Implementation

Monday, December 5th, 2011

Those old enough to remember the 1980s may recall then President Ronald Reagan’s, “Trust, but verify” messaging as part of the United State’s Cold War negotiations with the former Soviet Union. While evaluating LED luminaires may not seem as important as dealing with a nuclear arms race, the same “Trust, but verify” philosophy should be used to reduce risk prior to any large scale implementation of LED products.

But what should you verify? To better limit risk it’s important to understand where risk resides. Some typical questions could include:

• How do I know I’ll get the necessary sustained light levels over the duration of my application?
• How do I know that the luminaire mounting is strong enough to withstand vibration over time?
• How do I know the luminaire and its paint finish are durable enough to resist corrosion?

It’s important to understand the difference between specifying product features versus specifying product performance. Specific product features may imply performance, but by themselves fall short of ensuring any specific level of performance. For example, a street light luminaire that advertises a product feature utilizing four mounting bolts, instead of two, may imply a certain level of increased performance. For instance, it may imply resistance to conditions such as vibration. But without credible performance data that specifically addresses vibration resistance, no assumption regarding a product’s resistance to vibration should be made. Specifying product performance removes product features from the specification and puts the focus on what actually reduces risk, some level of product performance.

Lets get back to the questions. Would the level of risk be more greatly reduced by pointing to either product specific features or credible performance data? Well if the movie Jerry Maguire was about a great lighting designer, he would have probably shouted, “Show Me the Data!” There are relevant standards in place that can be referenced to quantify levels of durability for the three questions above and more. Once the necessary performance level is determined and specified, potential suppliers should verify their ability to provide certain levels of performance with credible data so as to reduce risk.

But, what about product warranties – they minimize risk, right? Although warranties are designed to reduce risk, warranties also present certain risks as well. The first risk is based on the strength and credibility of the company offering the warranty in the first place. Two nearly identical five-year warranties may seem equal at first glance, but if there is a high degree of uncertainty that one of the two companies may even survive for five years, it’s unlikely these two warranties would be viewed as equals. Overall product reliability is another factor to consider when determining the potential strength or value of a warranty. Companies with proven performance are probably less likely to experience catastrophic failures on a scale that may jeopardize their ability to honor warranty claims compared to new companies entering the market.

So the goal to managing risk shouldn’t be left solely to a good warranty. Even the best warranties do not eliminate risk, since associated costs may be incurred should warranty claims need to be made. Therefore, specifying performance during the product selection process is the best way to minimize risk. Remember, “Trust, but verify.”

Which would you rather have in your back yard- HID, CFL or LED?

Tuesday, November 29th, 2011

Most people are familiar with the acronym NIMBY, or the phrase Not In My Back Yard. Usually it refers to something people feel they desperately need, but don’t want to live near.

NIMBY

It could be a major shopping center. Yes, it would be great to have your favorite retailers close to home rather than having to drive 15 miles to get to them. But you don’t want it within walking distance, because then you’d have to deal with the noise, the traffic and everything else that goes with it.

The same goes for landfills and power plants. You’re glad your favorite appliances have power and that your garbage has somewhere to go, but you don’t want the facility that generates the power or your garbage’s new home to be visible from your back door. Yet at some point, if we don’t change our ways, that’s exactly what could happen.

One way you can protect your personal back yard is by specifying LED lighting instead of High Intensity Discharge (HID) fixtures in any lighting projects. And the beauty is, making that move not only reduces waste and potential environmental hazards – it helps you save money. Here’s how.

Typical well maintained parking structures that operate 24 hours per day, 7 days a week with metal halide technology will be scheduled for group re-lamping approximately every 9 months. Which means a parking structure with 1,000 lamps will potentially add 1,000 lamps (bonus: which contain mercury!) to the waste stream every 9 months. Those lamps take up real estate, and as Will Rogers said, they’re not making any more of that.

So sooner or later, the disposal company has to build a new landfill – maybe next to you. If that’s not bad enough, as much as we’d like to believe that all lamps containing mercury ranging from the 1,000 HID lamps in our example above to the CFL lamps the neighbor down the street is using in their home will end up being properly recycled, sadly we know that this won’t always be the case. So as disturbing a sight that new landfill might be, what could be even more disturbing is the potential mercury that is being released from the improperly disposed lamps you can’t see.

Grandma Learns How to Clean Up a Compact Fluorescent Light Bulb

Contrast this with an LED solution. LEDs contain no mercury. In addition, LED solutions can be designed to provide near maintenance-free service for more than a decade, even in our 24/7 parking structure example. Over a ten year period the owners of that 1,000 HID lamp parking structure will need to determine how to safely dispose of more than 12,000 lamps that a properly designed LED solution could avoid altogether. But there’s more to it than that. The materials used in BetaLED® luminaires are also RoHS (Restriction of Hazardous Substances) compliant, which means dangerous substances commonly used in electrical and electronics appliances are also avoided. In addition, BetaLED products are highly recyclable making it much less likely that they’ll see the landfill. Instead, they end up in other products – perhaps even in new LED luminaires. Ah, the circle of life.

Finally, we know LEDs can save significant energy consumption. But when coupled with adaptive control systems that can range from a simple occupancy sensor to a complex network based system, LED luminaires can save even more energy consumption. Let’s look at our parking garage again. There are probably large blocks of times when certain areas are vacant. Keeping the lights operating at a level that always assumes occupancy is just wasting energy and money. But with LED products that utilize adaptive controls you can significantly reduce energy consumption even further during periods of inactivity and instantly increase light levels as spaces become occupied. Not only does that reduce energy cost – it also can extend the longevity of an LED system as well.

The best way to make NIMBY work is to avoid the need in the first place. How could you use LED luminaires to keep your back yard landfill- and power plant-free?

Applying the Hybrid Car Principle to LED Lighting

Wednesday, November 16th, 2011

Talk to most people about the lifetime value or total cost of ownership versus the initial price and odds are you’ll get rolling eyes or glassy stares. Yeah, yeah, we’ve heard all that before, they’re thinking. Then came hybrid cars.

When regular unleaded gasoline was around $2 to $2.25 per gallon, hybrid cars were favored mostly by environmentally-conscious people and drivers who just wanted to be different. But when gas prices broke the $3 per gallon ceiling, and especially when they hovered around $4, suddenly you started seeing them everywhere. “Sure, they cost a little more up-front,” car buyers reasoned, “but we’ll easily make up for that when we’re smiling as we pass the gas pumps while others are miserably paying through the nose for a tank every few days.”

That’s the thing about the cost of a major investment. It isn’t only about what you pay to receive the goods. It’s about what it costs you overall, for as long as you use whatever it is.

This reasoning certainly applies to exterior and interior lighting. It’s not just about what the fixture costs initially. As this blog post says, it’s the total cost of ownership – including the cost of maintenance, as well as the cost of energy consumed by such solutions.

Take street lights, for example. A “20,000 hour” High Intensity Discharge (HID) lamp in a typical exterior scenario will likely be scheduled for replacement at 8,000 hours of service. Which, if you assume an average of 12 hours “on” per day, works out to 1.8 years.

Now compare that to an LED system that costs a little more to purchase up-front. For instance, an LED system rated at 50,000 hours will actually last 50,000 hours. What a concept! Again, assuming it’s on for 12 hours per day, that puts its service life at 11.4 years.

But the cost of the system isn’t the only thing involved. Replacing lamps also means sending out a road crew, paying for the fuel for the truck, shutting down lanes (thus suffering the ire of citizens who want the lamp replaced, but don’t want to be held up in traffic while it happens), properly disposing of the old lamp, etc. And you pay all those things every time a lamp needs to be replaced.

Maintenance on Street Light

Now here’s the kicker: LED systems continue to get more efficient each year, which means over the long term the cost to implement will likely keep going down. So by the time you’re ready to replace that system, in 11 years, it may actually cost you less.

Perhaps by then we’ll all be driving battery-powered vehicles. What do you think?

A Lot Can Happen in Just 20 Years: Where Exterior Lighting Was Then & Where It Is Now

Thursday, November 10th, 2011

To give you an idea of what the new generation of LED-based exterior lighting can mean to your projects, think back to what your life was like in 1990. That was over 20 years ago. Your cell phone, if you had one, was so big and heavy, carrying it probably qualified as an exercise program. Businesses and governments threw tons of dollars at something known ominously as Y2K, which was supposed to throw us back into the Stone Age. (It didn’t, but they still spent billions on new IT systems).  The washing machine and dryer you bought that year? They’re probably long gone…or chugging along on their last legs, costing more in energy alone than it would take to replace them with newer models.

Back then; the lighting industry was dominated by high intensity discharge sources like metal halide and high pressure sodium. Those lights were based on systems that often required the so-called 20,000-hour lamps in a standard exterior scenario to be replaced in masses as early as 8,000 hours after they were installed. Which means scheduled bulb replacements would have started just two years after installation.

Think about what that really means. While businesses and government agencies have always been told that they should do group “re-lamping” at the 8,000-hour mark, the fiscal reality is that hardly any of them ever do. They usually do spot re-lamping instead. That gets pretty costly year in and year out when you tally up the maintenance costs of hiring a crew, getting a lift truck out to the facility, and buying and installing the replacement lamps. It also results in poor lighting when lights go out, creating safety and image issues as well.

LED-based exterior lighting systems, on the other hand, not only can be designed to last up to 100,000 hours – they actually can remain in service that long, almost maintenance-free. That means they can last up to 20 years. By the time you’d need to replace your LED luminaire, who knows where technology will have taken us? Maybe we’ll all finally be carrying around the portable quantum generators that were predicted.

For businesses and governments looking to make smart infrastructure investments, LED-based exterior systems offer greater reliability, a wider range of optics to choose from, and can now last near maintenance-free for more than a decade. It’s one of the smartest fiscal moves they can make. Much smarter than our old washers and dryers that have needed to be replaced in the past 20 years.

Energy-Saving Surprises at Gas Stations

Thursday, October 20th, 2011

Cree is celebrating Energy Awareness Month with a series of blog posts about ways Cree and our products are helping save energy. Today’s guest post comes from Chris Ruud, president of Ruud Lighting, Inc., a Cree company.

There has been and will continue to be major growth in consumer interest in green cars – hybrids, clean diesel, plug-in hybrids and pure electric – according to the J.D. Power and Associates 2011 US Green Automotive Study. That same study also shows that 10 percent of sales by 2016 will come from vehicles with these fuel-efficient technologies.

This is great news. However, that four-fold increase in sales numbers compared to 2010 numbers still means that there will be millions upon millions of traditional, combustion engines cars out on the roads that need petrol (gas, diesel) fuel.

Cree Energy Awareness Month

A great many of us will probably be counted among the millions that haven’t made the switch to hybrid or electric vehicles, but that doesn’t mean we aren’t doing our part to conserve energy. If you’re reading this blog, you’ve probably installed or considered installing LED lighting (one of the most energy efficient lighting sources on the market) and you have probably adopted at least one of the countless other energy savings initiatives recommended by the U.S. Department of Energy.

The same holds true for petroleum stations. Yes, gas stations may represent energy consumption in your mind, but station owners all across the country already have and are continuing to take steps to help the environment. This market was an early adopter of LED lighting as a standard and it is truly transforming the industry. While still serving a need for energy consumption, station owners are realizing that they can achieve significant energy cost savings by retrofitting the lighting with energy-efficient BetaLED luminaires and other Cree LED lighting products.

BetaLED lights illuminate this gas station in Farmington, CA.

BetaLED lights illuminate this gas station in Farmington, CA.

With a reduction in energy consumption in island canopy lighting reaching an astounding 80 percent at some installations and a payback realized in just three years, station owners are taking the lead in creating a sustainable future in this market. And with more than 150,000 gas stations around the country, the opportunity is there for some serious energy savings.

Energy savings isn’t the only reason for the installations and retrofits. Imagine it is late at night, you are low on fuel and need to fill up. Ahead, you see signs for a few filling stations. Which one would you choose?

petrol1

33 THE EDGE canopy fixtures from BetaLED were installed at this gas station in Plano, Texas, helping reduce energy costs from lighting by 31 percent.

If you’re anything like me, I’m choosing the one that looks like the one on the right – the one that is well lit. Thanks to BetaLED and Cree, this station and others across the country have sustainable illumination that creates a safe and inviting atmosphere.

Cree broadens its presence on social media, adds new Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn profiles

Monday, October 3rd, 2011

At Cree, we tout the LED Lighting Revolution everywhere we go. That means our family and friends frequently have to listen to us Cree employees point out poor lighting and rant about why LED lighting would be better.

So naturally, we love the social Web because there are plenty of people on the Internet who care about energy efficiency. In recent years, we’ve turned to Twitter, facebook and our blog to educate the world about LEDs. (Our families and friend thank us).

And today, we’re pleased to announce that we’re going to be doing more of it. Today we’re launching two new Twitter accounts, a new facebook page and a new LinkedIn group.

Please join us in welcoming (and following) the newest additions to our social media family:

  • @CreeLEDs: With a focus on Cree components, this new Twitter handle will provide details on Cree XLamp products and modules as well as information on what our customers are doing with our LEDs. And, as always, we’ll be at your service ready to answer questions you may have about our products. We will continue to tweet from @Cree, but our tweets there will focus on Cree LED lighting products and Cree corporate news.
  • @CreeBetaLED: Focusing on outdoor lighting, this new Twitter handle will focus on product details, case studies, industry news, tips for a fair LED comparison, frequently asked questions and more.  Somehow we’ll pack this into 140 characters.
  • Facebook.com/CreeBetaLED: We’ll cover the same topics as our @CreeBetaLED Twitter account, only in more detail. We’ll share gorgeous photos of street light installations around the world and answer questions from our fans.
  • Cree BetaLED LinkedIn Group: For those of you who want to keep up with us on this professional networking site, you can start here. Our group will expand on the outdoor lighting topics covered

And, of course, we’ll continue to provide you updates from our existing social media outlets:

None of this would be possible without all of you, our fans, friends, followers and subscribers. Thank you for your support and for engaging with us online. We appreciate all of you!