Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Annual Energy Outlook 2014 Early Release
Technology
improvements for general service lighting, driven by federal efficiency
standards, are leading to increased reliability and bulb life. As
efficiency increases, residential electricity consumption for lighting
declines over time.
Although the initial purchase price is higher for
more efficient technologies than for traditional bulbs, significant
savings are achieved over the life of the bulb (also called a lamp). Lighting standards
mandated by the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 affect
general service lighting, the bulbs most commonly used for residential
lighting. At the beginning of 2014, these standards required the
production of higher-efficiency alternatives to traditional 40- to
60-Watt-equivalent incandescent lamps, which follow prior standards for
75-Watt and 100-Watt lamps. Between now and 2020, halogen incandescent
lamps will be able to comply with applicable standards for general
service lighting—a standard that traditional incandescent lamps cannot
meet. An additional round of standards taking effect in 2020 will likely
be too stringent for halogen incandescent lamps to meet, and major
manufacturers have already focused development on more-efficient
technologies.
The efficiency (also called efficacy—the light
output per unit of energy consumed) of incandescent lamps has increased
only moderately since the introduction of the first commercially
available incandescent lamps more than a century ago. Typical 60-Watt
incandescent lamps produce only 16 lumens of light output per Watt with
useful lifetimes of 1,000 hours on average, while a comparable halogen
incandescent lamp may produce closer to 20 lumens per Watt. An
equivalent compact fluorescent lamp (CFL) provides about 67 lumens per
Watt and lasts 10 times as long. Solid-state light-emitting diode (LED)
lamps are even more efficient—currently producing around 83 lumens per
Watt—yet are rated to last more than 30 times as long as a comparable
incandescent lamp. LED lighting technologies have been advancing rapidly
with projections for further improvements, resulting in lower cost,
increased reliability, and reduced energy consumption. By 2020, EIA
projects LEDs to produce more than 150 lumens per Watt.
Decreasing prices for more-efficient lighting technologies, aided by state and local incentives and the new standards,
are leading to increases in the average efficiency of installed
lighting equipment over time. Improvements in bulb life mean consumers
need to replace them less frequently, reducing projected purchases over
the forecast horizon.
http://theenergycollective.com/todayinenergy/356546/led-bulb-efficiency-expected-continue-improving-cost-declines
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