Title: Federal Legislation: Outdoor and Street Lighting
1Federal Legislation Outdoor and Street Lighting
Kyle Pitsor Vice President, Government
Relations National Electrical Manufacturers
Association October 20, 2009
2NEMA Who We Are
- Trade association of 430 manufacturers of
electrical and medical imaging products - Generation, transmission, distribution, control,
and end-use of electricity - 120 billion in domestic shipments
- 400,000 jobs
- 30 billion in exports
3NEMA Core Functions
- Codes and Standards
- Government Relations
- Market Data Business Information Services
- Industry Marketing Promotion
4Product Diversity
- Lighting
- Electric motors
- MRI and CT scanners
- Batteries and energy storage
- Industrial controls
- Fuses
- Switchgear
- Transformers
- Connectors and outlets
- Smoke and CO detectors
- Building wire
- Capacitors
- Traffic controls
- Welding equipment
- Circuit breakers
- Ultrasound imaging
- Power cable
5NEMA Lighting Systems Division
- Lamps
- Ballasts
- Luminaires
- Lighting Controls
- Emergency Lighting
- Solid State Lighting
6Recent U.S. Federal Legislation Affecting
Outdoor Lighting
- The Energy Policy Act of
- 2005 (EPAct 2005)
- The Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007
(EISA 2007)
7Energy Policy Act of 2005
- Mercury Vapor Lamp Ballasts
- For general illumination applications may not be
manufactured or imported, effective January 1,
2008 - In 2005, a notice in the Federal Register
clarified that this also includes luminaires
containing such ballasts - 2007 legislation provides for continued use in
specialty applications provided the ballast is
marked Not for general illumination and
identifies the specialty application
8Energy Independence andSecurity Act (EISA) of
2007
- Metal Halide Fixtures
- Metal halide lamp fixtures operated with lamps
150W but 500W shall contain one of the
following - A pulse-start metal halide ballast with a minimum
ballast efficiency of 88 or - A magnetic probe-start ballast with a minimum
ballast efficiency of 94 or - A non-pulse-start electronic ballasts with
- A minimum ballast efficiency of 92 for wattages
gt 250 - A minimum ballast efficiency of 90 for wattages
250W
9EISA Metal Halide Fixtures
- Exclusions
- Fixture with regulated lag ballasts
- Fixtures with electronic ballasts to operate at
480V - Fixtures that
- Are only rated for 150W lamps and
- Are rated for use in wet locations and
- Contain a ballast that is rated to operate at
ambient air temperatures above 50C - Effective Date
- Applies to fixtures manufactured on or after
January 1, 2009 - State laws with earlier effective dates remained
in effect until the Federal standards became
effective
10Market Characterization
- Current Outdoor Lighting Market
- High Intensity Discharge (HID) - 86.8
- Street and Roadway Lighting
- Mercury Vapor-20
- High Pressure Sodium-52.3
- Low Pressure Sodium-5
- Downtown Cities and Parking Lots
- Metal Halide-9.5
- Incandescent -11.2
- Fluorescent -1.9
- Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs)-0.01
- New technology--some pilot projects
- Data from U.S. Lighting Market Characterization,
Navigant Consulting 2002
112009 Federal Energy Legislation
- NEMA Approach for Outdoor Lighting
- New building construction and major renovations
- Adopt and enforce most current version of
ASHRAE/IES 90.1 - Funding to states to implement and improve energy
codes - Existing building outdoor lighting
- Tax incentives for building outdoor lighting
replacement and upgraded to meet ASHRAE/IES 90.1
- 2007 - Street and roadway lighting
- Set lumens per watt (LPW) standard based on
applications, promote use of controls, and direct
DOE to conduct rulemaking to update Federal
standards
12House and Senate Bills
- Setting federal energy efficiency standards for
outdoor and roadway lighting luminaires - H.R. 2454 (Waxman-Markey, ACESA 2009)
- Section 211 Outdoor Lighting Standards
modified H.R. 1732 (Harman-Upton) - S. 1462
- Senate vehicle
- NEMA testified in favor of including ODL
13House Legislation Section 211 (a)
- Outdoor Luminaires
- Manufactured on or after January 1, 2016 shall
- have initial luminaire efficacy 50 LPW, and
- use light source with lumen maintenance 0.6
- have capability of producing at least 2 different
light levels, including 100 and 60 of full lamp
output - outdoor luminaries used for roadway lighting
exempt from control requirements - Manufactured on or after January 1, 2018, shall
- have an initial luminaire efficacy 70 LPW, and
- use a light source with a lumen maintenance 0.6
- Not later than January 1, 2022, DOE issues final
rule amending standards (if technologically
feasible and economically justified) - for products manufactured on or after January 1,
2025 or the date of final rule plus one year,
whichever is later
14House Legislation Section 211 (a)
- Outdoor high light output lamps
- Each outdoor high light output lamp manufactured
on or after January 1, 2017, shall have a
lighting efficiency of at least 45 lumens per
watt
15Senate Bill
- NEMA involved in intensive, multi-month
negotiations on outdoor lighting provisions - Set efficiency levels on a Task LPW approach
taking into account application issues - Area, roadway and high-mast
- Decorative post-top and dusk-to-dawn
- Include some control requirements
- IES illumination levels
- Provide tax incentives
- Effective date of new standards
- Provide for DOE to do follow-on rulemakings
16Outlook and Prognosis
- House and Senate legislation part of broad effort
on energy and climate change - H.R. 2454 passed June 26
- S. 1462 could be considered this fall
- S. 1733 Kerry-Boxer climate change provisions
- Once Senate acts, House and Senate bills must be
conferenced and a consensus bill approved
17- Thank You.
- Questions?
- Kyle.Pitsor_at_nema.org