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Real Science

Let there be light

Michael Rosenthal

(10/2019) LED lighting technology is a solid-state lighting that uses light-emitting diodes (LEDs) as the light source, rather than electrical filaments (incandescent bulbs), mercury-vapor gas discharge (fluorescent lamps) or halogen (iodine or bromine) lamps. LED lamps consume significantly less energy and produce little heat or UV light. They last much longer than incandescent, fluorescent, or halogen bulbs. Changing to the use of these bulbs is a real positive move in terms of environmental practice. They can be utilized in homes and in commercial use, indoors and outdoors. So why aren’t we converting our lighting uses to LED more extensively than we have done?

During the previous national government administration a commitment was made to move to LED as the usual lighting source. However, the current national administration has rolled back a policy of our previous government administration that would advance the use of LED lighting via The Appliance Standards Awareness Project, which advocates stronger national efficiency programs. This is the cancellation of the move to the more efficient lighting by 2020, as mandated by Congress. The Project says that eliminating the new standards will cost consumers in the United States about $14 billion annually, increasing climate-change emissions by about 38 million metric tons annually…equivalent to the amount emitted by 8 million automobiles. Though LED lighting initially costs more to purchase, the added cost is made up over time by lower electric bills.

Fifteen states, New York City, and the District of Columbia oppose the rollback of this change and question whether the Department of Energy has the authority to negate aspects of the mandated changes, passed by Congress in 2007. California, Colorado, Washington State, and Vermont have enacted appliance standards of their own, apart from federal legislation. The bulbs in use now are essentially the same as invented by Thomas Edison and defined in an 1880 patent! Perhaps more states will take charge of this situation to move to a less energy wasting and more modern future.

California continues its leadership in developing more efficient and environmentally friendly energy sources. They are building a solar farm backed up by one of the world’s largest batteries. This farm would produce 7% of the electricity used by the city of Los Angeles at a cost lower than that generated with fossil fuel. It will be a 400 megawatt solar array, producing 876,000 megawatt hours annually, which is enough to power 65,000 homes during daylight hours. It will utilize an 800 Megawatt hour battery to store energy for use after the sun sets. Progress that has led to price declines has made renewable energy coupled with battery storage more practical. There has been great progress in battery development to provide power for long periods of cloudy and winter weather that will make solar power with battery storage more practical. In 2010 California passed a mandate that the state’s utilities must install electricity storage equivalent to 2% of their peak electrical demand by 2024.

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New York has declared the end of the measles outbreak, the largest there in nearly 30 years. New York City spent more than $6 million dollars, deployed more than 500 staffers, and ordered mandatory vaccination for people living and working in four Brooklyn neighborhoods. The problem was a spread of misinformation about the safety and effectiveness of the measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine.

A total of 654 people were infected, 52 of them were hospitalized, and 16 required intensive care due to serious complications. There have been 1,234 measles cases nationwide; no new cases have been reported since mid-July. Vaccination coverage has increased significantly since the emergency order, and the anxiety has been somewhat reduced. The area has been a favorite target of anti-vaccine groups, who held rallies and distributed misinformation through pamphlets and recorded conference calls. There were, however, those in the community who took valuable action to counteract the anti-vaccine group. A volunteer group, called The Vaccine Task Force, wrote and distributed booklets to parents to tell the story correctly, and they organized sessions to answer questions. New York State has also strengthened vaccine laws, revoking the privilege of parents to refuse childhood vaccination. There had been a law allowing religious exemption for school vaccination, and some 26,000 children were unvaccinated under this law. The law was revoked in June!

Publicity has made the plastic waste situation in the oceans better known, and some action is being taken to reduce waste plastic. Marriott International, the world’s largest hotel chain, announced that they will phase out miniature plastic bottles of shampoo, conditioner, and bath gel in favor of pump-topped bottles by 2020 at its 7,000 properties worldwide. The company estimates that the move will keep 1.7 million pounds of plastic from ending up in landfills each year. Plastic takes more than 400 years to decompose. Some 8.8 million tons of plastic are dumped annually into the world’s oceans. Last year Marriott cut out the use of plastic straws and stirrers.

A topic that is very important and personal to me is water quality. During my 19 years at Bard College in the Hudson Valley of New York state, I organized a stream study project for the Sawkill Creek, a stream that runs through the Bard campus and which produced campus drinking water and received treated aqueous waste.

In 2015 a rule gave the Environmental Protection Agency broader authority over the waterways of the United States. It has been reported that the federal government plans to redefine what water bodies deserve federal protection. It is expected that the new rules, a return to 1986 standards on water pollution, will seriously reduce wetlands protection. This effort is one of many of the current government reducing federal authority on wetland protection under The Clean Water Act.

I like to end on a positive note. In mid-September, The House of Representatives passed a bill banning oil and gas drilling in most federally controlled waters, and in particular voted to ban drilling in an ecologically sensitive oil rich section of northeast Alaska. Though this legislation is unlikely to be passed by the Senate or to be signed by President Trump, it indicates that there still is a portion of the population and government sensitive to environmental protection. Perhaps this passage will draw enough attention to move us toward more sensitivity to environmental protection. I purposely named this column Real Science in order to focus upon making decisions that reflect scientific fact. I believe we must look at our actions in a way to protect the environment – to slow global warming, to avoid the spread of disease, and to show wisdom in protecting limited resources. A recent Pew poll from early 2018 indicated that 51% of Americans oppose more offshore oil and gas drilling, indicating that the portion of Americans who support offshore drilling declined 10 % in the four years 2014-2018. Whatever your political affiliation, I urge you to consider environmental protection as both a practical and a moral goal.

Read other articles by Michael Rosenthal