Thanks in part to the green movement, energy efficiency has gone from being mostly associated with pollution reduction to also being known for its dramatic ability to reduce annual utility cost, making it a cost cutting measure that many companies now prefer to layoffs, cancellation of services, and outsourcing. But if you hope to achieve the biggest savings at the least cost, you shouldn’t just replace your building’s current technology with more efficient technology. You should target your building’s biggest problem areas first, hiring an energy consultant to perform an energy audit of your entire building. With the results in hand, the consultant can target solutions that most reduce your energy expense and meet additional project goals.

Energy Efficient Lighting Design is a Top Concern for Most Buildings

Because lighting technology tends to last for decades, many buildings are stuck in the past concerning lighting efficiency. Consequently, energy efficient lighting design is one of the most recommended efficiency measures for commercial buildings, especially considering interior lighting accounts for roughly 60% of a commercial building’s annual electrical expense. In most cases, the goal is to reduce annual lighting expense by at least 50%, a percentage that’s easily achievable when companies implement the right efficiency measures, which vary according to a building’s unique needs.

Four Conservation Strategies that Cut Annual Lighting Cost

The most well known measures in energy efficiency lighting projects are the replacement of old fluorescent ballasts with more efficient ballasts, and the replacement of incandescent lamps with compact fluorescent lamps and/or high intensity discharge lamps. But conservation strategies can be just as important to reducing lighting expense as implementing efficient technology. Three conservation strategies that often attend the implementation of efficient lighting are as follows:

1. Improved Light Control

After implementing efficient lighting, many companies need help controlling its use. For example, a single switch might control multiple lights, and general lighting probably remains lit until someone turns it off, regardless or workspace occupancy or time of day. In response to these problems, light switches can be rewired to let switches control less lights, and general illumination can be connected to automatic controls that regulate light levels according to movement, work schedules, the presence of natural light, time of day, etc.

2. De-lamping

De-lamping involves the removing of unnecessary lamps, which can be many considering that efficient lighting often raises interior light levels by 30%. When de-lamping, all lamps are considered for possible removal, from exterior floodlights to small nightlights and lights within vending machines.

3. Improved Light Settings

Sometimes enhancing the presence of existing illumination solves the need for more lamps. To provide more lighting without implementing more lamps, energy consultants often recommend implementing special lenses to light fixtures to focus light, implementing reflectors that spread light, and painting walls a lighter color.

View the original article here

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

Related Posts:

 

At a time when the economy makes many companies cut costs to maintain their profit margins, cutting energy costs remains one of the few cutting measures that doesn’t encourage job loss, as layoffs, outsourcing, and cancellation of services often do. In addition to preserving jobs and creating new ones, efficiency measures also benefit the environment by reducing carbon pollution, which should make you feel confident about harnessing its ability to reduce your company’s annual energy costs by 50% or more, depending on your implementation measures.

The Cost Cutting Effect of an Energy Efficient Lighting Retrofit

Determining how best to cut your company’s energy costs begins with hiring an energy consultant to perform an audit of your building’s power use, a process that often reveals interior and exterior lighting as an area with room for improvement. Unlike appliances and other types of equipment, lighting equipment usually lasts for decades. In fact, what forces many lighting technologies to the junkyard is the cancellation of their parts, not the decision to replace them. As a result, millions of companies have inefficient lighting, which, without knowing how much they could save with efficient lighting, they often decide to keep in the name of cost savings.

To get an idea of how inefficient lighting could cost your company, consider that interior lighting alone accounts for roughly 60% of a commercial building’s annual electrical usage, and that, according to a study performed by the Center for Building Diagnostics at Carnegie Mellon, the improved light levels that come with efficient lighting retrofits can raise workplace productivity by 3-13.2%, a percentage whose importance is underlined by the Rocky Mountain Institute, which points out that even a 1% increase in productivity can result in more annual savings than a company spends on power use. Far from offering a few thousand dollars a year in savings, performing an energy efficient lighting retrofit can dramatically impact a company’s annual profits.

The Efficiency Measures that Produce the Big Savings

Making a building’s lights more efficient usually involves replacing old fluorescent ballasts with newer ballasts and replacing incandescent lamps with compact fluorescent lamps and/or high intensity discharge lamps. But it also involves measures that manage the use of lights, such as improvement of lighting controls, de-lamping, and improved light settings.

1. Improvement of Lighting Controls

To improve a building’s lighting controls, an energy consultant may recommend the rewiring of light switches so that single switches no longer control multiple lights, and the installment of automatic lighting controls that regulate light levels based on physical movement, natural light, time of day, work schedules, etc.

2. De-lamping

When you de-lamp your building, you remove unnecessary lamps. Due to the improved light levels that come with most retrofits, de-lamping can result in the removal of everything from large exterior lamps to lamps within vending machines.

3. Improved Light Settings

When you improve your light settings, you take measures that prevent the need for additional lamps, such as: adding lenses to fixtures to focus light on certain areas, adding reflectors to fixtures to spread light, and painting walls a lighter color.

View the original article here

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , ,

Related Posts:

© 2012 Solar & Wind Power Solutions Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha