marsha walton, ph.d. senior project manager buildings ...€¦ · nyserda’s lighting r&d...
TRANSCRIPT
Marsha Walton, Ph.D.
Senior Project Manager
Buildings Research
End Use Efficiency & Innovation
NYSERDA
Albany NY
June 12, 2012
I. Some examples of projects funded under
NYSERDA’s Lighting R&D Program
II. Upcoming NYSERDA funding opportunity
for lighting projects
III. Evaluation criteria for funding
New York City
Transportation Dept.
currently purchases
approximately 3,000
portable lamp banks each
year
LED Lamp Bank consumes
80 watts vs. 375 watts
Based on replacing 5,000
units)
Savings: 4,845,375 kWh
and $484,537/yr.
SSL track light designed to
replace 50W PAR 20 halogen
Developed by W.A.C.
Field tested at Mineola Public
Library
Evaluated by the Lighting Research
Center
LED track head vs. MR16
14W vs. 48 W; 35,000 hrs vs. 3000
Equivalent 550 total lumen output
With efficacy >50 lm/W
≥35,000 life with no noticeable
color shift or lumen depreciation
Compact size (3.5” diameter)
≥ 80 CRI
Energy Star Rated
SELUX high-efficiency SSL parking lot
luminaire for pole top installation
70% lumen maintenance over 50,000 hours
Reduced maintenance costs
No mercury
Cold start capable (-40 C.)
Simple daylight-harvesting switch
designed to turn off electric lighting
when daylight is plentiful
Developed by the Lighting Research
Center
Field tested at Rensselaer campus, 72 locations
Private offices
Open-plan offices
Large public spaces
Most were retrofit installations
Results
Functionality and self-commissioning were
successful (<30 min to commission) with
best energy savings in large public spaces
(300-700 kWh/yr)
PV Lighting Demonstration at three sites
in Sullivan County, NY
- evaluated by the LRC, results published
as a DELTA publication
developed by Philips Hadco
Lighting & SolarOne
Solutions
Demonstration Results
Saves 600 kWh/yr compared to HPS
(150W)
Residents and visitors to Woodbridge
prefer LED lighting HPS (150W)
Installation was easy, no
cleaning/snow-shoveling necessary
in winter
On-off times/dimming operation
functioned
Uses four white LED modules (40 W
total) mounted in a post-top cut-off
luminaire
Powered by two batteries charged by
two 90 W PV panels
Remotely programmed for bi-level
operation (full output for 6 hours after
sunset and 30% remainder of night)
•Integrates direct & indirect T5 lighting
with white board lighting & teacher
controls in the front of the classroom
•Performance exceeds code by 50%
•CUNY adopted the ICLS performance
spec for its future lighting projects
- evaluated by the Lighting Research Center,
results published in a DELTA publication
Established in 2002
A collaboration between industry
and government, led by the LRC, to
support adoption LED technology
by:
• conducting collaborative
research and helping to reduce
major technical hurdles
• identifying key applications for
energy- efficient solid-state
lighting technologies
Collaborative Research
A Program of the Lighting Research Center
Lighting Answers: LED Lighting
Systems
NLPIP series publication that answers
some commonly asked questions
about lighting systems using LEDs.
-describes key issues important to
understanding the effective use of
LEDs
National Lighting Product Information Program
http://www.lrc.rpi.edu/programs/NLPIP/index.asp
PON 2606 Advanced Buildings
1. Support development of innovative, energy-
efficient building products in New York State
2. Conduct field demonstrations in New York State
3. Provide independent testing/application
guidelines
II. NYSERDA Lighting Research
Funding Opportunities
PON 2606 ADVANCED BUILDINGS
Lighting Research & Development
a. Concept Development – prototype development & refinement,
business & market analyses
b. Technology Development & Commercialization –
develop a technology, verify performance & commercialize
c. Product Demonstration – field installation of commercial
products, independent evaluation & public dissemination
PON 2606 ADVANCED BUILDINGS
a. Concept Development -- $75,000
b. Technology Development & Commercialization
– $200,000
c. Product Demonstration – $150,000
Projects are solicited through competitive
solicitations
Selected for funding based on
1. energy-savings potential,
2. job creation potential,
3. environmental benefits to New York State
Proposers’ credentials & capabilities