Baltimore Gas & Electric cuts their energy… use
Oct/090

BG&E truck repair facility in Woodlawn area of Baltimore County
Brian Smith, property manager for Baltimore Gas & Electric installed energy efficient lighting in their truck repair facilities and explained it this way;
At one time we were only a power plant, it didn’t make sense for us to be energy efficient. But now that we have to purchase power for our own facilities, plus our customers, it makes more sense for us to not use so much overhead and power. So [the energy efficient lights] really helps us.
The bottom line is that Baltimore Gas & Electric spent a half million dollars on 1500 light fixtures that were so energy efficient that the project paid for itself in just 18 months.
Smith attributes the energy savings to the high tech fixtures with advanced optics, which allow BG&E to cut back on the total number of fluorescent tubes. He was replacing high pressure sodium’s and old T12’s with T5HO.
And the color improve substantially, says Smith.
The issue with auto mechanics – truck mechanics. You pop the hood of a car, and you have all your bundles of wires that feed to your sensors and all your electrical components. When you have high pressure sodium lighting the orange and brown looks the same. You really can’t tell the color of the wire. By going to a higher output, brighter white light, with a high color rendition you can actually tell the color of the wires much easier. You don’t have to have a secondary light to see the color of the wires. It was a remarkable difference.
It was a no-brainer.
Enlighter.com posts photos
Jan/090
Hadco has offer up some nice photos, just published in Enlighter.org of the recent installation at Massachusetts Maritime Academy.
Energy Management Canada about Maritime Academy
Oct/080
The Canadian magazine, Energy Management just published the story about Massachusetts Maritime Academy’s installation of solar-powered pathway lights.
Capt. Allen Hansen championed the alternative energy project and is vice-president of operations at the school.
We now have a beautifully lit walkway students are using extensively, day and night.
We searched for a solution that was visible to visitors and didn’t add to the footprint of the Academy. And it is visible enough, that people who visit point out to us that, ‘hey you’ve got photovoltaic lights, don’t you’.
So we can share that story with them.The SolarOne lighting really has met all of our requirements. They’re attractive, they provide a good light for our students in the areas we wanted, and they haven’t added to the expense of operations on the campus.
Benefits of landscaping with high-powered solar-powered LEDs
May/080
Take a look at how Architectural Stone and Landscape Design Magazine explains the key benefits of landscaping with high-powered solar-powered LED lights.