ENERGY STAR速 Lighting: An Update on the New Program Alex Baker, MSc, LC, IES ENERGY STAR Lighting Program Manager LEDucation 6 Wednesday, March 21, 2012 New York, NY
Outline • About ENERGY STAR • Recent lighting program changes – Program structural changes – Third party certification / process changes
• History & integration of ENERGY STAR lighting specs • ENERGY STAR Luminaires V1.0 / V1.1 – Scope / luminaire categorization – Source photometry: LED light engines – Lumen maintenance projection
• ENERGY STAR Lamps V1.0 spec development • Questions
About ENERGY STAR
About ENERGY STAR • Created by U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in 1992 • A climate protection program creating partnerships between EPA and manufacturers • Goal: to reduce greenhouse gas intensity through promotion of energy efficient products and practices Photo: National Geographic
About ENERGY STAR • Managed by EPA & the U.S. Department of Energy • Branches: – – – –
Product labeling Residential (new + existing) Commercial and industrial State and local
• Labeling: 60+ product categories: – Office equipment – Lighting products • Luminaires (light fixtures) • Lamps (light bulbs)
– Appliances (white goods) – Home electronics – Heating & cooling Photo: National Geographic
American Consumers Trust ENERGY STAR Labeled Products
U.S. Electric Utilities Provide Incentives For ENERGY STAR Labeled Products
• $400M+ this year to incentivize consumers to purchase ENERGY STAR lighting products (www.energystar.gov/dime) • Many provide consumer incentives (e.g. rebates, POS discounts) for solid state (LED) lighting products
Recent Changes to the ENERGY STAR Product Labeling Program
Program Structural Changes • New Memorandum of Understanding signed September 30, 2009: www.energystar.gov/mou • U.S. EPA is the ENERGY STAR brand manager, responsible for: – – – – –
Setting performance levels Partnership agreements Product qualification, maintenance of qualifying product lists Marketing & outreach: consumer, retail Monitoring and verification
• U.S. DOE is responsible for: – Increased efforts in monitoring and verifying test procedure compliance – Development of Federal test procedures and metrics
Program Improvements • Labeling program being strengthened across all product categories • Program reviewed by: • Inspectors General at EPA and DOE (ongoing) • U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) (ongoing)
• ENERGY STAR is now a third-party certification program based on ISO standards; no manufacturer self-declarations • Testing laboratories and certifications bodies must be EPA-Recognized: • EPA recognition dependent on ISO accreditation and appropriate scope • www.energystar.gov/testingandverification
New Approach to Qualification and Verification • Third-party certification of test data: – EPA-recognized test laboratories: 40+ worldwide – EPA-recognized certification bodies (CBs): 8 domestic
• Verification testing (off-the-shelf): – Verify products continue to meet the ENERGY STAR requirements regardless of changes in the production process
• www.energystar.gov/testingandverification
11
ENERGY STAR Lighting Specifications: History & Present Integration Efforts
ENERGY STAR Lighting History: Four Existing Specifications • • • •
Residential Light Fixtures (est. 1997) Compact Fluorescent Lamps (est. 1999) Solid State Lighting Luminaires (est. 2007) Integral LED Lamps (est. 2009)
• Above provide ~75% savings vs. standard incandescent • As specifications are revised, qualified products are NOT grandfathered • Products carrying the ENERGY STAR mark must meet current specification on date of manufacture
ENERGY STAR Lighting Specification Integration Residential Light Fixtures v4.2
ENERGY STAR Luminaires V1.0 • finalized February 16, 2011
Solid State Lighting Luminaires v1.3
• effective April 1, 2012 (V1.1) • www.energystar.gov/luminaires
ENERGY STAR Lamps V1.0 Compact Fluorescent Lamps v4.3 Integral LED Lamps v1.4
• currently in development • to be finalized in 2012, effective 2013 • www.energystar.gov/lamps
ENERGY STAR Lighting: Specification Integration • Promotion of lighting technologies confuses consumers • Consumers aren’t lighting experts • Other promising technologies need an objective threshold: – – – – –
Organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs) Ceramic metal halide Electron stimulated luminescence (ESL) Light emitting plasma (LEP) Advanced incandescent (i.e. “2X”, “3X”)
ENERGY STAR Lighting: Specification Integration • New performance requirements to be technology-neutral: – luminous efficacy – color temperature – color rendering
• Technology neutrality provides objective means for ‘raising the bar’ – Example: someday CFLs won’t meet the bar anymore, so incentives could be redirected to products that can
About ENERGY STAR Lighting Specification Development • EPA develops specifications through an open stakeholder process – Multiple public drafts & comment periods
• Industry standard test methods and performance standards referenced – – – –
Illuminating Engineering Society (IES) American National Standards Institute (ANSI) Commission Internationale de I'Eclairage (CIE) ANSI/UL and CSA safety standards
About ENERGY STAR Lighting Specification Development • Terminology & definitions per IES RP-16-10 • Technical support: – – – – –
Lighting Research Center (LRC) at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Various contractors and consultants Pacific Northwest National Labs (PNNL) National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) ENERGY STAR Partners: manufacturers, electric utilities, retailers
ENERGY STAR Luminaires V1.0
ENERGY STAR Luminaires v1.0 • Combines scope of existing specifications – Solid State Lighting Luminaires v1.1 – Residential Light Fixtures v4.2
• Spec at: www.energystar.gov/luminaires
ENERGY STAR Luminaires v1.0 • First problem: applying the right test procedures to the right fixture types • For SSL, luminaire photometry is not always appropriate • “Decorative” versus “functional”: – LSD 51-2009 white paper by the National Electrical Manufacturers Association (NEMA) and the American Lighting Association (ALA)
Standard Slide for images
LM-79 Shortcomings
ENERGY STAR Luminaires v1.0 • Testing requirements depend on luminaire categorization • Directional (“functional”) luminaires: – – – –
Intended to illuminate a specific surface or area Examples: down lights, accent lights, under cabinet, task lights Evaluated using luminaire photometry (IES LM-79-08) Includes fixture optical losses (e.g. luminaire delivered lumens per input watt)
• Non-directional (“decorative”) luminaires: – Examples: wall sconces, chandeliers, ceiling flush, bath vanities – Evaluated using source photometry (IES LM-82-11) – Not inclusive of fixture optics (e.g. source lumens per input watt)
LM-79 Problems • Great for measuring white light luminaires: luminous efficacy, flux, CCT, CRI • Less useful for highly decorative luminaires: – Optical losses less critical – Lower performance expectations – Colorimetry at luminaire level generates data of dubious value
Robert Louis Tiffany®
LM-79 Problems
1 0.5 0.90.48 0.80.46 0.70.44
y y
0.60.42
CIE Chromaticity Diagram 1931 Black Body Locus
CIE Chromaticity Diagram 1931 Black Body Locus
White Shade
White Shade
Blue Shade
Blue Shade
Amber Shade
Amber Shade
Decorative Glass Shade
Decorative Glass Shade
0.5 0.4 0.40.38 0.30.36 0.20.34 0.10.32 0 0.3 0 0.30.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5 0.4 0.6 x x
0.7
0.8
0.9
10.5
Testing Decorative LED Fixtures Per IES LM-79-08 Lighting Research Center (NVLAP Lab Code: 200480-0) 2/13/2011
LM-79 Problems Product Description
Ambient Temperature (ËšC)
Input Voltage (V)
Input Power (W)
Luminous Flux (lm)
Luminous Efficacy (lm/W)
x
y
CCT
CRI
White shade
24.7
120.11
4.48
165.0
36.83
0.3929
0.3876
3761
73.6
Blue shade
24.7
120.11
4.48
129.9
28.99
0.3468
0.3698
4998
72.0
Amber Shade
24.7
120.02
4.48
82.6
18.44
0.4507
0.4129
2851
69.0
Decorated glass
24.7
120.12
4.48
34.9
7.78
0.4499
0.3942
2711
78.1
Testing Decorative LED Fixtures Per IES LM-79-08 Lighting Research Center (NVLAP Lab Code: 200480-0) 2/13/2011
LED Light Engines LED Light Engine: An integrated assembly comprised of LED packages (components) or LED arrays (modules), LED driver, and other optical, thermal, mechanical and electrical components. The device is intended to connect directly to the branch circuit through a custom connector compatible with the LED luminaire for which it was designed and does not use an ANSI standard base. (IES RP-16-10)
…A.K.A. “the guts” of the fixture.
LED Light Engines
The Alliance for Solid-State Illumination Systems and Technologies (ASSIST) Established in 2002 by the Lighting Research Center to: • Advance the effective use of energy-efficient solid-state lighting. • Speed the market acceptance of a new technology. • Help LED technology to gain widespread use in lighting applications. • More information: www.lrc.rpi.edu/assist
The Alliance for Solid-State Illumination Systems and Technologies (ASSIST)
ASSIST Recommendations for Testing and Evaluating White LED Light Engines • Test procedure for evaluation of white LED light engines • Tests photometric, electrical performance at elevated temperatures
IES LM-82-12 for LED Light Engines • IES LM-82-12 – Normative reference: IES LM-79-08 for photometric and electrical measurements
• References LM-79 for all photometric and electrical measurements
IES LM-82-12 for LED Light Engines • “LM-79 as a function of temperature” • Two ways to look at LED light engines: – As an object: a mechanically integrated unit – As a concept: a combination of LED driver + array
• Both testable using this test method • Integrated LED lamps also testable per LM-82
IES TM-21-11: Projecting Long Term Lumen Maintenance of LED Sources • Lumen maintenance projections using LM-80 data using IES TM-21-11 • Covers LED packages, arrays, modules • Sample size recommendation adopted by EPA (LM-80 silent) • Available now through IES
ENERGY STAR TM-21 Calculator: www.energystar.gov/TM-21calculator
ENERGY STAR Lamps V1.0 Specification (in development)
ENERGY STAR Lamps V1.0 Draft 1 • Issued October 21, 2011 • Combines scope of: CFL V4.3 and Integral LED Lamps V1.4 • EPA’s intent: – merge existing specs – one technology-neutral set of performance requirements – further increase quality and reliability
ENERGY STAR Lamps V1.0 Draft 1 • Focused on remaining consumer detractors • Only minor efficacy increases are proposed • Efficacy levels to be revisited after EISA 2007 phase-in is complete • Limited commercial scope • www.energystar.gov/lamps • lamps@energystar.gov
Thanks! Questions? Alex Baker, MSc, LC, IES ENERGY STAR Lighting Program Manager (202) 343-9272 baker.alex@epa.gov
www.energystar.gov/luminaires
luminaires@energystar.gov
www.energystar.gov/lightfixtures
lamps@energystar.gov
www.energystar.gov/lamps www.energystar.gov/lightbulbs
logomisuse@energystar.gov