Editorial:
Insights Into Energy Star for SSL - The Battle Continues
... The battle as I see it is "simple versus valuable". In a June 24 web conference, we heard from the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regarding their "technical amendment" to the Residential Lighting Fixture (RLF) specification 4.2. It's a simple way for a manufacturer to achieve Energy Star qualification... Read the editorial...
(if it resists... go here)
Carmanah Announces Restructuring, and Manufacturing Outsourcing LIGHTimes Staff
June 26, 2008...Carmanah Technologies, a maker of solar powered LED modules headquartered in Victoria, British Columbia Canada, has announced a restructuring of the company. The company indicated that it hopes the restructuring will help reduce expenses, increase efficiency, and provide sustained profitable growth. As part of its plan the company said it would focus more on its lighting business. The company also said it would outsource manufacturing to Flextronics International Ltd.
The company will therefore close its Victoria, BC-based "Enterprise" manufacturing facility by February 2009. In addition, the company announced that it would close its U.S. solar component distribution business and California warehouse by September 2008, as well as its Calgary, Alberta office and warehouse by October 2008. However, the company indicated that administrative functions from the California and Calgary locations will be moved to the its headquarters in Victoria, British Columbia Canada.
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LEDtech and Other Taiwan Companies Make Inroads in Refrigerator Case Lighting LIGHTimes Staff
June 26, 2008...Walmart and United Supermarkets have chosen to start using LED lighting in their refrigerator cases. Both stores have chosen LED lighting from GE Lumination to light their refrigerator cases in many stores. However, that is not the only option that companies have. Another company, LEDtech has made significant inroads into the refrigerator case lighting market.
LEDtech Electronics of Taiwan, an LED packaging firm, has received orders for light bars for 200 Taiwan convenience stores, according to an article in Digitimes. According to the article, the convenience store chain in Taiwan has nearly 3000 refrigerator lighting units that will need to have LED units over the next three to four years. Other Taiwan-based companies are reportedly competing for the next round of orders from the convenience store chain.
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June 26, 2008...Mechdyne Corporation introduced the 3D Review Station, an integrated computing, display, and software system that uses new 3D-ready HD televisions to make interactive 3D more accessible to designers and engineers. The 3D Review Station is reportedly a compact, roll-about visualization system for individual and small team collaboration in offices, research labs, and conference rooms. The system includes a 61" HD resolution screen that uses Digital Light Processing technology from Texas Instruments and LED backlighting for a longer life than Previous DLP Screens, a high-powered 3D graphics workstation, a height-adjustable, wheeled cart, LCD monitor, 3D glasses, and a common hand-held game controller for interaction.
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Formosa Epitaxy Brightness LED Backlight Modules for Notebooks LIGHTimes Staff
June 26, 2008...Taiwan-based Formosa Epitaxy, a maker of LED backlighting modules, reports that it has increased the brightness on its backlight modules for notebook PCs. The company reportedly met the brightness requirement of for notebooks of 1800 mcd this quarter, according to a Digitimes article. Digitimes cited sources that estimated that the company will likely reach 2,000mcd for its backlight units for notebooks by the end of the year. Digitimes sources claimed that the company’s LED lighting efficiency has reached 100 lm/W, and its green LED brightness has reached 70-80 mcd.
EPA Outlines Light Engine Standards for Residential Lighting in Teleconference SSLDesign News Staff
June 24, 2008...The EPA outlined the basics of its LED module standards in a teleconference today. The EPA spokesperson explained that full-fixture photometry is not practiced for indoor residential lighting. The EPA sited the example of a light source that is often put into a mica or alabaster fixture to produce the right ambiance in residential indoor lighting. The EPA spokesperson said that the organization wanted a set of lighting standards that was technology independent. The EPA indicated that the goal of its guidelines is to allow designers to (at least some extent) directly compare LED lighting to incandescent, fluorescent, or compact fluorescent light sources. For this reason the organization reportedly chose to create standards at the light engine level, not at the fixture level.
The EPA defined the light engine as a packaged LED, a driver (rather than a ballast), and an incorporated heat sink. The light engines would be required to have 50 lm/W or higher efficacy for an uncovered LED light engine or 40 lm/W or higher for a covered LED light engine.
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Supermarket Uses GE Lumination LED Refrigerated Display Lighting to Slash Energy Costs LIGHTimes Staff
June 24, 2008...Texas-based United Supermarkets LLC, has reportedly retrofitted low- and medium-temperature refrigerated display cases in all of its 47 stores with a GE product. The product, from GE’s ecomagination product line, is an LED solution from Lumination, a GE Consumer & Industrial business. GE says that the Lumination LED Refrigerated Display Lighting solution replaces United Supermarket's traditional T12 fluorescent lamps and T8 fluorescent lamps. According to GE, the LEDs also provide uniform color and up to three times the light-level uniformity of fluorescent lamps.
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Future Lighting Donates Luxeon Rebel LEDs for Solar Car Project LIGHTimes Staff
June 24, 2008...Future Lighting Solutions, a distributor of Luxeon Rebel LEDs from Philips Lumileds, reported that it has donated Luxeon Rebel LEDs for use on a solar car designed and built by students at the University of Minnesota. Future Lighting says that the car will compete in the 2008 North American Solar Challenge, a 2,400-mile race scheduled for July 13-22. Luxeon Rebel LEDs are surface mountable high power LEDs, that the Philips Lumileds says produce the highest light output per package and the highest light density (lumens/ mm2).
“The LEDs available to us for our solar-powered car three years ago were larger and nowhere near as bright as the Luxeon Rebel LEDs available today. These newer power LEDs take a big step forward in power and usability,” said Jeff Hammer, a UM instructor and solar car project faculty advisor. “This contribution from Future Lighting Solutions played an important role in optimizing the vehicle’s signal lighting, minimizing power requirements, and helping us assemble the resources to complete this year’s solar car project.”
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UDT Instruments Introduces New Measurement System LIGHTimes Staff
June 24, 2008...UDT Instruments of San Diego, California USA has introduced a new LED measurement system, the portable S-471 LED Optometer. UDT notes that it is designed and configured for all LED measurement requirements. It features microprocessor control and three measurement data presentation options including direct display measurement with analog bar, RS-232C computer interface, and analog voltage input. The company says its easy to use in production or lab settings. It comes with a silicon photometric detector and LED holding sockets for a variety of LED types. UDT says that all of the sockets are designed to meet the recommended CIE Publication 127 Conditions A and B for candela of LEDs.
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Lighthouse Technologies Demonstrates High-Resolution Video Panels LIGHTimes Staff
June 19, 2008...Lighthouse Technologies has chosen to demonstrate its high-resolution LED video display panels at InfoComm08 in Las Vegas, Nevada USA a premier event for cutting-edge AV technology. The company’s high-resolution R6-B and R4-S LED panels, as well as its latest LED display with the LEDScape Tile T120850, a high-resolution tile display designed for any size or shape, will be on site at Booth N6713 in the North Hall at Las Vegas Convention Center.
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Luminus Devices and Texas Instruments Create Lamp-Free Projectors with Improved Image Quality LIGHTimes Staff
June 19, 2008...Luminus Devices of Billerica, Massachusetts USA, has collaborated with Texas Instruments to produce a home theater projection system which combines Luminus’ PhlatLight LED technology with TI’s Digital Light Processing (DLP) technology. The two companies will reportedly demonstrate the 1080p prototype home theater projection system during InfoComm 2008 taking place from June 18 – 20 in Las Vegas.
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Commentary & Perspective...
Insights Into Energy Star for SSL - The Battle Continues Tom Griffiths - Publisher
June 26, 2008...The battle as
I see it is "simple versus valuable". In a June 24 web conference, we
heard from the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regarding their "technical
amendment" to the Residential Lighting Fixture (RLF) specification 4.2. It's a simple way for a manufacturer to achieve Energy Star qualification for any fixture incorporating a qualified LED "light engine". If
you need a catch up, you can read more about the reaction to this "double top secret"
program in
our last editorial. Overall, it didn't play really well when the EPA announced
that it had effectively created a whole new technology specification without regard
to any public process, review or implementation mandates (Rule book? What rule
book?). We can only speculate on the EPA's motivation (which we did last time),
and it is really hard to assign them even somewhat noble intentions. You don't
secretly create industry specifications when you believe they are the best thing
for the industry. Nonetheless, our objective is to encourage the EPA to do the
right thing, and helping the industry and affected stakeholders understand the
issues will allow the collective pressure to continue urging them towards what
most of the industry sees as the correct path for retaining value in the Energy Star "brand".
In a nutshell, the EPA
came up with module-level criteria that would allow "LED light engines"
to be the Energy Star qualifying unit in residential applications. Their introduction
to the spec sums it up pretty well, "EPA has adopted test procedures that
are focused on the light source, not accounting for the optical effects of glass
or plastic diffusers which tend to be selected by consumers based on aesthetic
versus performance considerations. Accordingly, the adopted test procedure is
designed to evaluate the performance of LED light engines, which integrate an
LED package(s), driver and heat sink into a single unit. This approach is consistent
with the existing RLF program approach to testing light source and ballast combinations
(a.k.a. "platforms") in the context of fluorescent technology."
In their conference call, the EPA calls it a "technology neutral approach",
which would seem to make sense when comparing fairly equal technologies that do
fairly equal things. LEDs differ from CFLs at least as much as CFLs differ from
oil lamps (and likely even more).
It is important to acknowledge that
the DOE's Energy Star approach, arrived at through the public and open process
that is mandated by the governing program regulations, does add a burden to residential
fixture manufacturers that they have not had in the past. Since Energy Star came
along fairly late in the market adoption failure curve for CFL technology, it
merely got to help clean up the mess rather than taking a role to help avert it.
By the time there was an Energy Star RLF qualification, consumers were generally
seeing that CFLs, in their different forms, provide them with a decent quality
and predictable light source. At that point, if they get a "bad one"
(slow to reach full light output or flickering), they simply take it back to their
local superstore and don't buy that brand again. Here is the difference with SSL:
Taking it back and choosing a different CFL "bulb" or fixture is a lot
different than taking it back and not buying that technology again for 3, 5 or
10 years. At the current residential early-adoption stage, if there is a poorly
performing fixture, it's the LED technology inside that will take the blame since
it is considered "the unknown" in the equation.
The EPA RLF specification
allows such a range of light engines, from dim to bright, and from warm to harsh
white, that it seems unlikely that the consumer will be able to discern whether
a particular light engine is potentially useful to them or not, much less being
able to extend the thinking into the impact on the fixture would be. In their
conference call, the EPA addressed the classic "CFL failure" by stating
that, "We will actively protect the value of the Energy Star brand. If we
see harsh, dim lights showing up through the program, we'll take actions to eliminate
that." Obvious question: If you know that an inferior product solution can
achieve certification under the spec, why not simply define the spec in a way
that does not provide inferior combinations with the opportunity for certification?"
Obvious answers: A) When you're in too much of a hurry, details like that can
be overlooked or B) That would have led to the larger question of whether simply
basing a fixture's Energy Star rating on the qualification of the light-source
component even makes sense at this stage in the adoption curve.
As far as
the stakeholders are concerned, there are two main camps. One would be the fixture
manufacturers that appreciate the EPA's approach because it lowers their burden.
DOE kept that in mind when they adopted a "qualifying family" approach,
which basically means that a fixture manufacturer can qualify the lowest performing
member of basic design, where a single housing has differing lenses, trim and
baffles, and apply the qualification to all the other members of the family. There
will be some testing by Energy Star to verify the rules are being met, and a violation
will simply need to be corrected. You aren't tossed out of the program. How much
does that testing add up to for a product family? Something on the order of $500
to $1500 for complete luminaire photometric and UL-conformant heat testing. Not
exactly a piggybank breaker given the current value of the LED-based products.
The
other stakeholders who oppose the EPA approach are those specifically within the
solid state lighting specific portion of the lighting industry, who need SSL to
succeed, and the utility companies. The utilities invest billions of ratepayer
funds in support of energy efficiency programs. They also want to see SSL succeed
sooner rather than later, and as a result, the recognition that confusing or possibly
ineffective standards will slow things down is not escaping them. At least one
utility behemoth, California-based Pacific Gas & Electric Company(PG&E) made
a fairly clear statement against the current EPA approach. The statement was an element of a question asked by Mary Matteson Bryan, Lighting Portfolio Manager for Emerging Technologies at Pacific Gas and Electric Company (or PG&E) during the June 26 DOE conference Energy Star webcast where she asked, "With the release of RLF 4.2, PG&E is very concerned about potential marketplace confusion with two different SSL Energy Star specifications in place. In fact, until the current issues over Energy Star for SSL are resolved, PG&E does not plan to include products qualified under the EPA RLF 4.2 specification in our incentive programs. Has DOE been contacted by manufacturers or customers who share this concern and are confused?" The DOE answer was, "Yes, we have been contacted by a number of concerned stakeholders and are working to resolve this as quickly as possible, and at high levels of our two agencies." ... C'mon EPA, let's pull the spec back and re-do the process with stakeholder
involvement.
Editorial Correction: A few weeks ago, in our coverage
of a Philips Lumileds Lighting announcement
regarding the adoption of their Luxeon Rebel products into several Philips LED
module products, we did not make it fully clear that the LED modules were not
a Philips Lumileds product. Philips Lumileds designs and manufactures LEDs, not
lighting modules and their intention was to highlight what they see as the advantages
of Philips Lumileds Luxeon products in modules of those types, regardless of whose
modules those might be. Other Philips lighting companies and divisions are responsible
for the design, production and sale of the variety of modules and luminaires.
We apologize for any confusion that may have resulted from our original wording
in that article.
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