2012年1月15日星期日

The LED Streetlights Could Drive You Crazy and Make You Fat?



NewsLead-570This is a test on LED streetlight. During the day, the block of bungalows and houses at 22nd Avenue East and East Mercer Street looks like most of Capitol Hill. But at night, it looks crazy. This is one of seven test areas in the neighborhood where Seattle City Light swapped the high-pressure sodium streetlights, which emit a warm orange hue, with glaring LEDs. City officials want to replace all 40,000 residential streetlamps in Seattle with the new light-emitting diodes by next year to save energy and money. But the lights cast a sickening hue. “It is a very cold color—zombie blue,” says Dan Travers, who lives on the block. “My first thought was that people are going to look scary under these lights.”
“It looks like you are in a supermarket aisle,” says Andie deRoux, who lives in an apartment building seven blocks west of Travers. Abby Katzman, who has lived on the eastern slope of Capitol Hill for 20 years, says, “I like the energy it saves, but it does seem very cool and wintery.”
On the shortest night of the year, just after dark at 11:00 p.m., I walked to each of Seattle City Light’s test areas to see what’s sparking revulsion from Travers and others who live under the lights. The beams from the high-intensity, light-emitting diodes are striking. The rays turned my skin the color of white taffy and cast crisp shadows on the pavement. “Zombie blue” is exactly right: Like a day-for-night special effect in a vampire movie, the test streetlights create the sort of atmosphere where you almost expect the undead to emerge from the flower beds and begin eating your face. Everyone I spoke to enthusiastically supported the idea of the LEDs—which require 50 to 60 percent less electricity for the same lumens—but most resented the quality of the light itself.
The problem with the new lights isn’t just aesthetic. According to Dr. David Avery—a professor of behavioral sciences and light therapy at the University of Washington and the region’s leading researcher on the impact of light on human chemistry—the LED lights could interfere with human biorhythms. Certain photoreceptors in the eye’s retina react to cooler colors of the light spectrum, sending a signal to the brain that the sun is up. When humans see the blue light, our bodies think it’s daytime. “The sensitivity to these cells for the blue and greenish color makes perfect sense, because the sky is blue. So for millions of years, life has evolved with this 24-hour rhythm of blue light being very prominent for part of the day and then darkness,” he says. “This is kind of a conductor of a circadian symphony in the brain and body.”
According to Avery, “Theoretically, if someone has one of these LEDs or a blue light outside their window, it could fool the eyes and the brain into thinking that the sun is still up, so the melatonin hormone might not rise normally and sleep might be disrupted.” Incandescent lights, the standard bulb in homes, are on the red end of the spectrum. (You may think of them as being white, but they’re not.) Shifting the city’s primary outdoor lighting to blue-hued LEDS, Avery adds, “would be a major change in terms of our environment.” Studies suggest that people exposed to daylight at the wrong hours, like those who work night shift, have more health problems such as high blood pressure and obesity, Avery says.
Mayor Greg Nickels wants most Seattle residents to be living under new streetlights by 2015. Seattle City Light intends to install the lights specifically in residential areas—not commercial arterials or industrial zones, which require more illumination than LEDs can affordably provide.
“They would save about nine million kilowatt hours and about $408,000 a year,” says Seattle City Light spokesman Scott Thomsen. An LED lamp uses only 50 watts, while traditional high-pressure sodium bulbs require 130 watts and waste electricity on heat. The conserved power roughly equates to the energy used by 750 single-family houses a year, Thomsen says. Moreover, the LED lamps last three to four times longer—up to 18 years—which drastically reduces maintenance costs to the city. (The city currently pays about $100 in labor costs to replace each dead bulb.)
But LED fixtures cost much more. Whereas the bulbs in the existing fixtures (awesomely dubbed “cobra heads”) cost about $15, the LED lamps are part and parcel with their fixtures and each costs $300 to replace, says Edward Smalley, Seattle City Light’s streetlight engineering manager. “The real payout for the city, to the customer, is not having to go out to change the light.” Funding to kick-start the program comes from a $6.1 million federal stimulus grant to reduce energy use. Of that, $1 million will go toward installing the first 2,500 streetlamps next year, assuming the Department of Energy approves the expenditure this summer. If the city council expands the program, new streetlamps citywide will cost about $20 million.
City officials acknowledge the test lights aren’t great. (A different brand of LED is being tested at each site, or in some cases the same brand at different levels of brightness.) Although some people like the lights, other people in the test areas have been complaining—in one area, the reaction from residents has been so intense that Seattle City Light is canceling that test site. And it is continuing to look for better technologies. There’s a relationship between a light’s warmth and how much energy it saves. High-pressure sodium lights, which give off that night orange glow, emit light at about 2200 degrees Kelvin. But the pilot LEDs are between 5000 and 6000 Kelvin. While Smalley acknowledges the new lights are “a lot bluer, for sure, than what we have now,” LEDs as warm as the old lights aren’t energy efficient enough to be practical. Seattle City Light will begin testing slightly warmer-hued streetlamps in Seattle’s South Park neighborhood in late July. “We are looking at 4000 degrees Kelvin and above, so that way we can provide the best comfort for the city and the energy savings that we are looking for.”
Anchorage has begun installing 16,000 LEDs streetlamps, San Francisco has announced it will convert 30,000 streetlamps, and Los Angeles has announced plans to convert 140,000 lamps. Smalley says that technology to produce energy-efficient LEDs with a more palatable hue is evolving, with new generations of lights emerging as quickly as every six months.
Considering the bulbs live longer than most pets, the city should take as much time as necessary to pick a light we can live with for a while. Smalley said that those folks who dislike the lights, stay tuned and look to our next test sites like South Park. No one has locked into what you see out on the street now.   www.bgocled.com

No Shadow LED Man



LED Sculpcure
If you ever wanted to see what the phase shifting of a body going through a Star Trek transporter looks like in real life, you won’t do much better than the recent exhibit by Makoto Tojiki.
The artist created this LED light sculpture called “The Man With No Shadow” and showed off his work at the recent Salone Satellite event in Italy. Tojiki reveals little about his technical methodology, but the futurist bent of the work speaks for itself. You can check out more stunning images of the LED man here.   www.bgocled.com

Our Best LED Clearance Sale Ever


Thank you to everyone who has stopped by the LED Waves booths at BE11 and NFMT the past few weeks! These events were loads of fun and while we’re enjoying this down time between trade shows, we’re really excited about meeting more of our supporters at Globalcon next week. If you’re in Philadelphia March 30-31st, look for us at the Pennsylvania Convention Center at Globalcon Booth #401.

Meanwhile, back at the warehouse, we’re still updating our inventory and making room for more state of the art LED lights. We’ve added tons of great items to our Clearance section - so take a look and see if your old favorites made the cut!

If you’ve got a large project involving signage or backlight, now is the perfect time to check out the Missouri Waterproof. Like the Mississippi, this LED light come in 38” segments, but what sets the Missouri apart is its 17.5” lead wires for easy DIY-ability. You can daisy-chain these guys together to create the perfect backlighting for letters and custom logos – even outdoors! Previously $33.95, the Missouri Waterproof is now on sale for $23.95.

We’ve also got spools and spools of LED rope lights – in amber and green and red, oh my! Imagine everything you love about LED lights in rope form: low profile, high impact, and low wattage. And with the inherent dependability of LEDs, these rope lights have long, productive lives ahead of them. Please rescue them from the lonely warehouse!

Call us at 1-800-986-0169 if you need more technical information about these or any other of our LED lighting products. Our sales team can also help with special orders, availability, and pricing by quantity. Whether it’s over the phone, at a trade show, or online at LEDWaves.com, we’d love to meet you and talk your ear off about LED lights!   www.bgocled.com

Free Passes to Important Green Industry Trade Shows!


We've been having such a great time participating in trade shows across the country, we want to pass on the opportunity to you guys! Trade shows offer a chance for us to meet fellow green professionals, show off our latest innovations in LED lights, and spread the gospel of energy-efficient solid state lighting. Meanwhile, attendees gain valuable business contacts, watch product demos, and - most importantly - network, network, network!   www.bgocled.com