Cree LED Revolution Blog

Cree and LED lighting are starting a revolution

August Cree LED Lighting Winner rewarded for taking steps to go LED

Thursday, September 29th, 2011

When it comes to our monthly photo contest, our judges are usually on the lookout for submissions showing poor lighting that Cree LED lighting can easily help fix. But this month, the judges wanted to reward someone who has already taken steps to go LED.

Shaun McCance is trying to light his Cincinnati, Ohio, home entirely with LED lighting. He has already made a good dent, as his kitchen is half lit with LED lighting. Sadly, the other half is lit with CFLs. You can easily spot the difference in his photo submission for our August contest (or at least we could easily spot the difference):

kitchen

Shaun is the winner of our August photo contest and will receive five Cree CR6 LED downlights to help him reach his goal of going all LED. The CR6 downlight consumes just 10.5 watts but can replace up to a 65 watt incandescent without compromising light quality. That’s because it features warm incandescent-style light (2700K for you lighting know-it-alls) and is dimmable to 5 percent.

And, if the energy savings and beautiful light quality aren’t enough for you, prepare to drool over its lifetime. The CR6 LED downlight is designed to last 50,000 hours. That means Shaun could leave his new lights on eight hours a day, seven days a week and more than 17 years could pass before he might have to pull out a ladder to replace them.

I wrote Shaun to ask him what he was going to do with his new lights and he responded:

“I’ll put four of them in my kitchen, which will make all of the overhead lights in my kitchen LED. Right now, half of the lights in the kitchen are LED, and the others are CFL. When I come into my kitchen, half of it is poorly lit until the CFLs warm up. I’m looking forward to being able to use my pantry without waiting for light for two minutes.”

We’re looking forward to that for you too, Shaun! Another feature of our CR6 LED downlights is that they instantly come to full light with the flick of a switch. That means no more waiting for those slow fluorescents to warm up.

You have a chance to be a winner just like Shaun. Submit a photo of lighting in your home or office that you would like to replace with our CR6 LED downlight. Or, if you can’t wait, find a distributor near you.

New site launches dedicated to LED news

Monday, December 6th, 2010

Cree has been hanging out on social networks for a little over a year now. Chillin’ with our tweeps, building community, educating our facebook friends and blog subscribers about LED lighting technology and the innovative things we’re doing at Cree.

Admittedly, those first few months were a little lonely. It took some time to find the folks who would be interested in hearing what a semiconductor and LED lighting company had to say (my mom was one of our first fans on facebook … thanks, Mom). We’ve learned that you’re out there, and not only are you listening, you’re also helping us spread the good word about energy-efficient LEDs and Cree. For that, we thank you.

We want you to make informed decisions as you begin swapping out your incandescent and fluorescent lights for a more efficient technology. And we’re excited when we see other folks embracing the Internet to do the same.

That’s why I’m interested to see what will come from the newest LED site on the scene, SSLScoop.com. It launched in late October and is put together by the same folks who bring us Solid State Lighting Design and LIGHTimes, online industry resources focused on helping LEDs become mainstream lighting sources.

I spoke with Tom Griffiths, president and publisher of SSL Design News, about the new site at Lightfair. At the time, he was still in the planning stages of the site, but he told me he hoped it would offer a place for thoughtful commentary on the industry.

Already the SSLScoop blog has tackled some interesting topics, including “the EPA’s recent decision to remove  the “Non-Standard Lamps” section from the Energy Star Integral LED Lamp specification.”

What are some of your favorite websites for LED lighting news? Let us know what you read in the comments section.

Hear Cree CEO Chuck Swoboda speak on energy panel at Duke University

Monday, November 1st, 2010

What steps should we be taking to plan for the energy demands of tomorrow? It’s a question that Cree CEO Chuck Swoboda will join other panelists in addressing during the “Energy for Tomorrow: Accelerating Energy Innovation” event at Duke University on Thursday.

The event at Duke’s Fuqua School of Business will be moderated by TIME and Fortune editor Michael Elliott, and features our CEO as well as President of Shell WindEnergy Richard Williams and President of the Alliance to Save Energy Kateri Callahan.

And don’t worry about making the trek to Duke University, you’ll be able to watch it if you have an Internet connection. There will be a webcast of the panel at 4 to 6 p.m. EST Thursday and you can tune in here simply by clicking on the “LIVE: Panel Debate” link under “Online Resources.” You’ll be redirected to Duke’s Ustream channel. You will need Adobe Flash to tune in from your computer.

The event is being presented by TIME and Fortune in partnership with Shell and Fuqua’s Center for Energy, Development, and the Global Environment. Organizers say the “Energy for Tomorrow” program was inspired “in the wake of unprecedented growth in global demand and ever-pressing environmental issues” which has put the energy sector at a crossroads.

Until now, the “Energy for Tomorrow” program has focused on letting top business school students from around the world submit their ideas on a sustainable energy future. But this panel will allow business leaders to share their thoughts.

Cree CEO Chuck Swoboda will be speaking Thursday at Duke University

Cree CEO Chuck Swoboda will be speaking Thursday at Duke University

If you haven’t had a chance to hear Chuck Swoboda speak, I definitely recommend setting an alert so you don’t miss the webcast.

Filmmaker documents first day of Cree’s Habitat for Humanity construction as part of documentary on Montagnard people

Monday, August 16th, 2010

A little over a week ago, Cree employees helped break ground on the world’s first all-LED Habitat for Humanity house. The Cree-sponsored house in Durham, NC, is being built for a Montagnard family originally from the central highlands of Vietnam.

We didn’t know it when we started construction, but a Raleigh filmmaker is documenting the story of the U.S. Special Forces and their loyal allies, the Montagnard people. Montagnards were allies of the United States during the Vietnam War and have since been persecuted for fighting for the United States.

Camden Watts is the producer and director of documentary, Abandoned Allies, which is scheduled to be released in 2011. Camden was at the Cree kick-off event to document the construction of this new home. She produced this short video from the Habitat kickoff event to offer a bit of insight about the Montagnards and to give folks a taste of her upcoming film:

Abandoned Allies Presents: A New Home for a Montagnard Family from Camden Watts on Vimeo.

I can’t wait to see the finished product – both the documentary and Cree’s Habitat house.

Cree breaks ground on the world’s first LED-lit Habitat for Humanity home

Saturday, August 7th, 2010

Today we’re breaking ground on the world’s first Habitat for Humanity House lit entirely with LED lights. Cree employees are working with the Habitat for Humanity of Durham to build the home over the next three months. Cree is sponsoring the construction of the home, which will include our newest LED recessed light, the CR6™ downlight, as well as other LED products featuring Cree LEDs.

The LED lighting in this house is projected to save approximately $250 worth of electricity costs per year over traditional lighting. When it’s complete, this home will be a true example of the energy savings you can achieve when you ditch Edison’s ancient technology for energy-efficient LEDs.

The Durham home that we’re helping to build is part of Cree’s previously announced three-year, $1.5 million pledge to provide its high-efficiency LED downlights for all new Habitat homes built in the U.S. We hope to finish construction by October 2011.

This is the vacant site in Durham where Cree's Habitat for Humanity house will be built.

This is the vacant site in Durham where Cree's Habitat for Humanity house will be built.

We’re so excited to help build the first Habitat home lit solely with LED lights. The CR6 downlight will be one of the primary fixtures in the home. It’s a 10.5 Watt light that delivers warm light and is dimmable to 5 percent. It’s designed to last 50,000 hours, which means the family that moves into this home could leave the CR6 lights on for eight hours a day, seven days a week and the lights could last more than 17 years!

I’ll keep you posted on construction.

Country Living House of the Year lit with Cree LED lights

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

If you think a two-story house with shutters and a wrap-around-porch looks a little out-of-place nestled between the skyscrapers and marina in New York City’s World Financial Center, you’re not crazy. The Country Living 2010 House of the Year was airlifted in to show Manhattan what a high-end, well-built green home could look like.

HOY

The Country Living House of the Year as it's being set up in Manhattan.

The historically-inspired green modular home is on display through Thursday, so you can see for yourself how a home can consume 50 percent less energy and save thousands of gallons of water a year compared to a standard code-built house, according to Country Living.

Among the ways this home is saving energy is through the use of energy-efficient Cree LED lighting. Cree provided our LR6™LED downlights for this year’s Country Living House of the Year to demonstrate the beautiful light quality and major energy savings that can be achieved through the use of LED lighting.

We constantly hear from skeptics that LED lighting isn’t ready to light your home. But that’s simply not the case, and we’re glad that the Country Living home in Manhattan (of all places) will be yet another public demonstration of LED lighting.

The LR6 downlights that are in the house consume only 10.5 Watts of energy and are designed to last 50,000 hours. That means the lights in this house could stay on for 8 hours a day and run more than 17 years. Could you imagine not changing a light bulb for 17 years? What’s more is at the 50,000 hour mark, these LED lights shouldn’t just burn out. Instead Cree’s LED lights are designed to provide at least 70 percent of their initial light output at the 50,000 hour mark. So, depending on your lighting needs, you could still be using them 50,000 hours later.

If you would like some LR6 LED recessed lights of your own, you can try to win our monthly photo contest. Each month we giveaway five Cree LR6 downlights to one lucky winner.  Just submit a photo of bad lighting in your home or office to qualify for the June contest.

Vice President Joe Biden and Secretary of Energy Steven Chu to visit Cree on Thursday

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

My boss has been talking in hushed whispers and racing around our campus. I couldn’t wait for her to break her silence so I could find out what was going on. Turns out Vice President Joe Biden wanted to visit our Durham, NC, manufacturing campus. Since then she has had her hands full with arranging access and taking care of the many details that come along with having our country’s No. 2 leader stop by for a visit.

The Vice President will tour and make remarks at Cree on Thursday. For those of you who don’t know, Cree manufactures LEDs and energy-efficient LED lights. Our company mission is to obsolete energy-wasting light bulbs, including incandescent and fluorescent bulbs. We strongly believe that the cleanest, cheapest energy is the energy you never use. And the Department of Energy estimates that widespread adoption of LED lighting by 2025 will reduce electricity demands from lighting by 62 percent.

We’re working hard to educate the public about this energy-efficient technology. And we’re thrilled that our company is growing. We anticipate adding another 300 American jobs during the next several years, in addition to the many jobs we added in 2009. Cree received a $39 million Advanced Energy Manufacturing Tax Credit through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act to help purchase new equipment and bring these new jobs to our North Carolina manufacturing facility to increase production.

So we can’t wait to show off our campus and hard working employees to the vice president and Secretary of Energy Steven Chu, who will be accompanying Biden on the trip. We’ve been told the pair is interested in hearing from our employees about the challenges and issues they face in their day-to-day lives.

I’ll be live tweeting the remarks made by Vice President Biden and Energy Secretary Chu (along with other observations about what it’s like to have the Vice President come to your company for the day). You can follow along on Twitter, we’ll use the hashtag #BidenCree. In the meantime, you can learn more about the LED lighting Revolution here.

Raleigh, NC celebrates three year commitment to LED lighting

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

Think back to February 2007. What were you doing back then to save energy? It’s hard to believe that just three years ago, the push for energy-efficient lighting focused on CFLs. It was in early 2007 that Yahoo launched a website urging people to switch to CFL bulbs.

But while much of the world was focusing its attention on CFLs, the city of Raleigh was setting its sights on even more energy-efficient technology: LED lighting.

Yesterday we celebrated Raleigh’s three year LED City® anniversary. In February 2007, Raleigh became the first city in the world to join the Cree LED City program, an initiative to deploy and promote LED lighting in cities throughout the world.

Raleigh joined the program by installing LED lights at just one spot in the city to see what results the city would achieve. Three years later, city officials are so impressed with LED lighting that Raleigh now has more than 40 installations, ranging from accent and indoor lighting to street and parking lot lighting.

So how much is the city saving by using LED lights? City officials estimate the city is saving $215,000 a year on energy and maintenance costs.

In fact, city spokeswoman Jayne Kirkpatrick is so jazzed about the savings that she tried to quantify it for taxpayers. She told us that the city’s annual savings from LED lighting is the equivalent of four police officer or firefighter salaries; five years of sidewalk repairs; five years of sports field renovations or the cost of nearly two brand-new garbage trucks.

Want to see some of the places that boast LED lighting in Raleigh? Take a look at this Google map I put together. The map includes video of the following locations: Underground parking deck at Raleigh Convention Center, street lights outside Progress Energy Headquarters, pedestrian lighting at Exchange Plaza, street lights at Raleigh Convention Center, architectural lighting on City Plaza Art Towers and solar street lights at Campbell University Law School parking lot.


View Raleigh, NC: An LED City Tour in a larger map

If you’re interested in getting your city to try energy-efficient LED lights, here are the steps your city needs to take.

Will new labels for light bulbs make it easier to select lights?

Monday, December 14th, 2009

Have you ever stood in the lighting aisle at the store and picked out a bulb based on the wattage, only to come home, screw it in and see that it was way brighter (or dimmer) than you expected? It’s an easy mistake to make, especially when you’re buying energy-efficient lighting.

The Federal Trade Commission is proposing new labels for light bulbs that are based on light output instead of energy consumption, a move that could make it easier for consumers to pick out the bulbs they need.

Under the proposed change, the front of a bulb’s package would list the brightness in lumens and the estimated energy cost per year. Flip the package over, and you would find a “lighting facts” label that includes details on life expectancy, color appearance (warm to cool) and energy use in watts, under the proposal. The labels would also require acknowledging whether bulbs have mercury (CFLs contain mercury, but LEDs don’t). Take a look at the proposed changes here:

proposed change

Those of us who grew up with incandescent bulbs knew that an average 75 Watt bulb was going to be about twice as bright as a 40 Watt bulb, even though light output is measured by lumens and not watts. But since energy-efficient lights like CFLs and LEDs produce more light while using less energy, you can’t really judge their brightness based on their wattage.

To get a fair comparison on brightness, you really need to look at lumens and not watts. Consider this: This month Cree announced that we were able to achieve 186 lumens per Watt for a white power LED. That’s pretty remarkable when you consider the average 25 Watt bulb produces 215 lumens.

Now, it’s important to note that we’re not currently putting that 186 lumen per Watt LED in a light bulb. But our business is basically built on the premise that it’s possible to produce bright light while saving energy.

But back to the bulbs…as traditional incandescent bulbs are phased out, it will become increasingly important to make sure consumers understand how the new energy-efficient lighting they’re buying will perform. That’s also why I blog about issues like this. The more you know about LED lighting, the better!

And for those who think LED lights will never be viable, definitely take a look at the full report the FTC made on the proposed label changes. Among the many bright spots for LEDs in the report is this:  “The Commission believes that labeling for LED bulbs is likely to assist consumers in their purchasing decisions because they are substitutes for incandescent and CFLs and are likely to become increasingly available for household use.”

Coincidentally, one of our Twitter followers recently asked us why bulbs aren’t measured in lumens v. Watts:

TWEEP QUESTION

Well, @Chris_Gammell, we hope this post helps answer your question! If you need more details, check out this post by Jim Brodrick, who oversees Solid State Lighting for the Department of Energy, about the proposed change.

What do you think about the FTC proposal to change the way labels look? Do you think this will make buying a light bulb easier?

Introducing the Cree LED Lighting Revolution blog

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

As leaders of the LED Lighting Revolution, we find that many people are in the dark about energy-efficient LED lighting. We’re working hard to change that, and we hope our spiffy new blog will help. So thanks for stopping by. We’ll pause for a few seconds while you subscribe to our RSS feed. (One-one-thousand, two-one-thousand, three-one-thousand …)

Good, you’re back. Now … on to revolutionary things!

To understand the Cree LED Lighting Revolution, you may have to change your mind set about lighting and LEDs in general. You see, for a long time people said LEDs weren’t a viable source for general lighting.

GinnyTradeshowBooth2

LEDs were long relegated to indicator lights: They lit traffic signals and the speedometer on your car’s dashboard. Then LEDs were used to backlight things like cell phones and TVs. And they were also used to cast colored light in fountains and on buildings. And the LEDs did a great job.

But in recent years, LEDs have found their way into a slew of lighting fixtures used in businesses, parking garages, streets, homes and more. And you know what? LED lights are more energy efficient than many other light sources, including the classic incandescent bulb, really hot halogens and even those toxic stop-gaps, CFLs.

LED lights require up to 85 percent less energy than light bulbs and up to 50 percent less energy than fluorescent tubes. And LEDs are capable of producing beautiful light. Cree LED lights are being used in the Pentagon and there are plans to install them in 650 Walmart stores in the produce and electronics sections. In fact, there are LED lights in a lot of places.

Bad lighting habits can’t be broken if no one understands the alternatives. The Cree LED Lighting Revolution is dedicated to teaching you more about the technology and showing off real-life examples of LED lights.

So follow me, Cree blogger Ginny Skalski, and take a stand against bad lighting. Join the LED Lighting Revolution and subscribe to our blog for more updates. Thanks!