Thousands of hours of invention tweaking, by Thomas Edison and 125 years later, the U.S. Clean Energy Act of 2007 makes the incandescent light bulb go away in 2012. This bill was introduced by the U.S. House of Representatives and pass by the U.S. Senate in June of 2007.
In 2012 the 1st phase is for 100 watt and 75 watt incandescent light bulbs to be banned. By 2014 the 60 watt and 40 watt incandescent light bulbs will be banned.
The smart way is to start replacing each incandescent bulb, as they each go out, with a flourescent bulb. Click here for information on "How to Choose Energy Star Compact Fluorescent Light Bulbs"
This new trend creates an awesome opportunity for money making fund raisers. Check out Light Bulbs America for details. Through their program you make approximately 40% profit on each fluorescent light bulb sold.
Check out the Energy Star web site to see if there are cash back rebates in your U.S. state for purchasing Energy Star approved compact fluorescent light bulbs.
ENERGY STAR Qualified CFL facts:
Expenditures | ENERGY STAR Qualified Light Bulb (26-Watt CFL) | Standard Incandescent Light Bulb (100-Watt bulb |
---|---|---|
Initial Investment | $5 | $0.35 |
Energy Cost | $20.80 | $80 |
Replacement Cost | $0 | $3.38 |
Total Cost | $25.80 | $83.73 |
+NOTE: When comparing incandescent or halogen bulbs to ENERGY STAR qualified bulbs or fixtures, compare the light output or lumens and not Watts. Watts equal the energy used, not the amount of light.
Flourescent light bulbs, save money, last way longer and lower energy bills for ever consumer.
Walmart has jumped into saving energy with a marketing campaign to sell 100 million fluorescent bulbs to every customer.
The videos below show different aspects in replacing an incandescent bulb with a fluorescent.
Compact Fluorescent vs. Incandescent Light bulbs
Myron Ebell Debates Energy Efficient Light Bulbs (9/13/07)
Energy Efficient Light Bulb Comparison