LEDs last up to 20 times longer than incandescent bulbs and use much less energy.
Save Energy with Lighting
Lighting
- Turn
off lights when you are not using them. A single 100-watt bulb left on all
night costs about $25 over 12 months.
- Switch
from incandescent to LED lightbulbs. LEDs last up to 20 times longer than
incandescent bulbs, use about a sixth as much electricity, and don’t
contain mercury, like compact fluorescents (CFLs). After all, 90% of the
energy used by an incandescent bulb is wasted as heat - only 10% is
converted to light. The EPA estimates that a typical household would save more
than $200 each year by switching to LEDs throughout the house.
- Try
LED lightbulbs in hard-to-reach fixtures. You won't have to replace them
for as much as 20 years!
- Replace
halogen torchiere lights. Use Energy Star-labeled LED torchieres.
They're cheaper to operate and safer to use.
- Keep
bulbs clean. Dust can cut light output by as much as 25%.
- If
you have already replaced your incandescent lights with compact
fluorescents, keep your CFLs until they burn out, and then replace them
with LEDs. CFLs use a little more energy than LEDs, don’t last as long,
and nearly all CFLs contain mercury, so it’s wise to use them for their
full lifetime, and then dispose of them properly.
We hope these energy saving tips with lightbulbs are helpful to you.
Last updated July 26, 2019