Lights Fittings
Thursday, June 10th, 2010Lighting is taken for granted by most people. Most people simply walk into a room and turn on a light without giving any thought to it at all. That same light is often left on in the room to light the darkness when the occupant has left the room. People waste energy with their lighting needs without meaning too. Looking at some of the facts it quickly becomes obvious that more energy efficient lighting is needed.
Consider the average home on any given day and you will find lights on in most rooms. Each room typically has overhead lighting, mood lighting, and reading lighting. Each room varies with the amount of light it has and how it is used. The dining room in a typical home usually has a chandelier with many bulbs burning simultaneously. Perhaps a dimmer switch is on the fixture to enable mood light to be used for intimate dining affairs. A bathroom will have an overhead light, eyeball lighting in the ceiling over the tub, shower and extra lighting in the vanity area to adequately light the space for use. The kitchen in a home can sometimes look like an airport landing strip with the large number of lights in the ceiling, on overhead fans, over appliances, under cabinets and of course decorative lights over the bar and table eating area. The list in each room can go on and on but the point is that the energy used in a home is vast. People must learn to conserve energy in lighting to make certain we become a more green society.
Homes are not the only culprit for excessive energy use. Commercial use is equally as great if not more so. We demand that buildings glow with lighting; parking lights need to look like daylight in the evening and decorative lighting is abundant in most commercial buildings. Do we really need a parking lot to be lighted up like the sun is out at midnight? Granted, safety is a concern but some of the lighting we have grown to call a need is really excessive use. We can learn to be more energy efficient in our commercial use of lighting as well.
Energy efficient lights fittings bulbs in all lights in homes and commercial use could save a tremendous amount of energy. Simply taking the time to change out each bulb in lamps and overhead fixtures in a home can be a money savings event for the homeowner as well. To save energy and money together seems like a double advantage! Another way to save energy is to have timers on lights or learn to use only the minimum amount of lighting necessary for the task at hand. For example, when reading by a nice comfortable lamp do the overheads, spots and ceiling lights really need to be on? Energy efficiency in lighting requires a commitment to change from most people.
