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Email : info@interiorcontrol.co.uk

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The lighting requirements of Part L of the Building Regulations have tightened.

February 23rd, 2011

No Lightbulb

No Lightbulb

The requirements applying to lighting efficacy have moved from Approved Document L2A (ADL2A) to a new, second-tier document, Non-Domestic Building Services Compliance Guide (NDBSCG). For general lighting in office, industrial and storage areas, values are expressed in terms of luminaire lumens per circuit-watt. The new values are 55 lm/W, compared with 45 lm/W in the old Part L.

For general lighting in other areas, and display lighting, efficacy is expressed in terms of lamp lumens per circuit-watt. The values have risen from 50 lm/W to 55 lm/W, and 15 lm/W to 22 lm/W respectively. The design of the luminaire is not included.

The new values also apply when lighting is provided or extended in an area greater than 100 m2. This has to be reported to Building Control.

Increasing the installed capacity of lighting may trigger a consequential improvement to other building systems. For example, a lighting system that is extended into a previously unlit space will need to meet the relevant minimum efficacy, prompting a need to make other energy efficiency improvements, such as insulating hot water pipes or fitting occupancy sensors.

ExCeL Centre chooses Dialight high bay LED lights

February 15th, 2011
ExCeL Centre London

ExCeL Centre London

The award winning ExCeL centre in London has selected Dialight’s DuroSite  LED high bay lights to replace their 400W HPS units in the main boulevard.

They have achieved a 70% energy saving and a doubling of light levels from the 194 units fitted and are now looking to fit Dialight’s DuroSite  LED high bay lights throughout ExCeL’s 46 conference halls.

Chris Barnes, Engineering and Energy Manager, had trialled other LED lights and says: “Dialight’s High Bay suits the purpose for the building; it looks nice, it’s aesthetically pleasing, it ticks all the boxes. For example, the boulevard is a public area and when there’s a power cut the HPS can take 2-3 minutes to come back on, whereas the LED is back on instantly.” He added “Considering our ceiling height is 10 metres, [installation] was very easy – four guys, six nights on two ‘magic carpets’.”

ExCeL London’s management team takes great pride in having one of the greenest and most energy efficient exhibition centres in the world. By replacing the high pressure sodium lamps with Dialight LED High Bays they will potentially save close to 700kW of energy per day equating to over 250MW of energy per year. On top of that the LED High Bays carry Dialight’s 5-year warranty which means they will also save greatly on maintenance.

For Chris Barnes, the main issue is light quality while the reduced energy, maintenance needs and carbon emissions are all added bonuses to the lighting efficiency. As he says, “Our workshop’s immediate reaction to the LED was ‘Wow!’ I’d describe it in two words and say the High Bay is ‘selling itself’.”

EDF increases electricity cost by 7.5%

February 4th, 2011

Yesterday EDF Energy joined the rest of the rest of the big six energy suppliers un the UK by raising their electricity prices by 7.5% and their gas prices by 6.5% effective 2nd March 2011.

This lastest price rise has angered consumers as it follows closely on the heals of the last price from EDF Energy which was published only in October 2010.

Analysts predict that the high price of oil, high wholesale energy costs, increased network charges and new environmental obligations will continue to push the price of energy up.

£1m extra to change light bulbs

February 2nd, 2011

The Daily Telegraph reports today that Stoke-on-Trent city council paid £1.4m last year for scaffolding after a ban on using ladders by its maintenance partner, Keir Stoke. The contractor insists that scaffolding is used even for the most routine of jobs such as changing light bulbs.

The Daily Telegraph article can be found here.

It is hard not to agree with one independent councillor who said “It’s health and safety gone mad.” but there is little doubt that there is a strong push to ensure that the Working at Height regulations are complied with. This is where totally maintenance free LED lighting comes into it’s own – no need to change any bulbs or touch the fixtures for the lifetime of the LED light (in the case of the Dialight DuroSite range 60,000 hours or 13 years running 12 hours every single day).

HSE catches company employing unsafe working at height practices

November 18th, 2010

A surprise visit from an HSE inspector proved very costly after a company in Caerphilly was caught failing to protect workers from falls from height.

A Prohibition Notice was issued on the day of the inspection, which required work to stop. HSE inspector David Kirkpatrick said: “When we visited the site, we found clear failings that left workers at risk of falling from height, and it was necessary to stop all activity above ground floor level until safe systems of work were put in place.”

The company was fined £10,000 and ordered to pay £4,514 despite nobody being injured and the company having no previous convictions.

The full article can be found on the SHP website.

Dialight scoops 2010 techMark Sustainability Award

November 17th, 2010

techMARK Sustainability Award Winners 2010 - Dialight PLC

techMARK Sustainability Award Winners 2010 - Dialight PLC

Dialight became the first winner in a new category at the 11th Annual techMARKAwards dinner to recognise the success and achievements of the technology industry over the past year and showcase the innovative companies that form the techMARK community.

Newmarket, UK – 12 November 2010 – Dialight shone through to scoop the prestigious 2010 techMARK award for Sustainability at London’s Intercontinental Hotel last night against a strong short list that included Pace, Genus and Logica.

Dialight is the world leader in applied LED (light emitting diode) lighting technology which is capable of delivering measurable savings in power and carbon emissions as well as offering a lifetime that can be five to fifteen times longer than conventional lights. Working with optional smart control software, LED semiconductor technology enables cities, commerce and industry to take control of their power consumption, reduce overhead and effect radical extensions to maintenance cycles. These savings have often been overlooked, as costly wave and wind projects have dominated media interest, but awareness of the benefits of LED lighting technology is now gradually breaking through as cities around the world seek ways to become more energy efficient and to reduce their carbon footprint.

Roy Burton, CEO of Dialight was quoted last night as saying, “Winning this award is both gratifying and timely. At last, cities around the world have an alternative to switching off street lights to save money in these challenging times. They can now replace them with smart, sustainable LED lighting with a lifetime that is five to fifteen times longer than conventional lighting. Recent technological and cost advances allied with significant power consumption reduction have shortened the payback time, so LED solutions now make commercial sense.  Dialight has recently pioneered innovative financial solutions to enable the financing of these solutions and thus enable more rapid deployment of white efficient lighting in our cities and in industry. I would like to pay tribute to our design teams on both sides of the Atlantic for ensuring this prestigious win for Dialight.”

The introduction of Carbon Reduction Commitments (“CRC’s”) has meant that LED lighting is at last being seen as a key element in their achievement. Until now LED lighting has been unrecognised as a silver bullet that can reduce carbon from the moment it is installed.

Dialight has a proven track record of designing and manufacturing LED units that are equipped to withstand hazardous environments in industry and in off-shore installations. This pedigree allows Dialight lighting fixtures to be fitted in hazardous areas in industry such as paint shops, dusty facilities and utilities where exposure to corrosive chemical environments prevails.

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About the techMARK sustainability award

The techMARK awards, sponsored by PwC, are held annually and are one of the largest gatherings of technology companies in the UK. The sustainability award recognises accomplishments in one or more of the three key areas of economic, environmental and social sustainability. As well as making their own operations more sustainable, techMARK companies may have an important role in helping address wider issues such as the causes and effects of climate change, resource efficiency and innovation, or social equity.

Transport company fined £28k + costs: bad lighting a factor

November 16th, 2010

A transport company in Southampton was fined £28,000 and ordered to pay costs and compensation after a worker was seriously injured.

Although he was wearing appropriate high visibility clothing the deficient workplace lighting created a dangerous situation.

The HSE notes that under Regulation 8(1) of The Workplace (Health, Safety and Welfare) Regulations 1992:

“Harris Transport Ltd failed to discharge the duty imposed on it by Regulation 8(1) of the Workplace (Health, Safety and Welfare) Regulations 1992 in that it failed to provide suitable and sufficient lighting in its workplace for work activities occurring outside daylight hours in its loading yard, which resulted in an accident causing injury to Lee McMahon on the 17th November 2006, whereby they/he/she are/is guilty of an offence contrary to section 33(1)(c) of the Act and liable to a penalty as provided by section 33(3) of the Act.”

The full ruling can be found on the HSE web site.

About LED lifespan

November 15th, 2010

One of the questions asked most often by our clients is “What is the life expectancy of LED lights?”.

The lifetime for high pressure sodium or metal halide bulbs is typically 15000-25000 hours, that is more than half will have stopped working in this time. LED lifespan refers to the time when the LED light output reaches 50% of the rated luminous output, not reaches zero. Often there will not be a critical failure of an LED light, only a reduction in brightness.

Some companies claim that their LED light has a life of 50000 hours or 100000 hours, actually, it is very hard to give an accurate life for a LED light. While some companies may do some accelerated life testing, most make an estimate based on data sheets from the LED chip manufacturer and some assumptions of how the LED chips will behave in the final luminaire. Often it is not the LED chips themselves that fail but poorly designed driver circuitry populated with cheap components that stop working. Some manufacturers also pay little attention thermal management in the lamp leading to lamp failures much, much sooner than the lifespan quoted by the LED chip manufacturer.

Dialight carefully designs its luminaires to ensure that the driver circuitry and components are suitably specified and thermal management is more than adequate for the application. Dialight then uses accelerated testing of the whole luminaire to accurately establish the average lamp life of at least 60000 hours. This is why Dialight is able to offer a full 5 year manufacturer warranty backed by a £77m UK PLC.

Then we have to consider lumen decay and maintenance. A traditional high pressure sodium or metal halide bulb reduces in brightness by up to 44% to the end of its life when it breaks. Dialight uses Cree XLamp XP-G LED chips to achieve a reliable 80%+ lumen maintenance after 60,000 hours. In the same time you would have had to replace the bulb in a traditional lamp 3-4 times.

Money out of thin air

November 12th, 2010
House with solar panels

House with solar panels

On 26th August 2010 Ian Cowie published an article in the Daily Telegraph entitled “How the roof over your head could earn £1000 out of thin air”.  In it he described how, according to British Gas, half the homes in Britain could share in a “£7bn rooftop bonanza”.

Home owners would not need to put up any capital to participate in the scheme and take advantage of the generous Feed-in-Tariff (FIT) announced earlier this year by the government. An average family might be better off by about £600 a year whilst larger installations could generate up to £1000 a year.

The full article can be found on the Daily Telegraph web site.

March Foods warehouses save cost and energy with Carbon Trust funded LED lighting

November 11th, 2010

For the last three years Managing Director Paul Cope of UK based March Foods had been looking for a way to reduce energy consumption in his warehouses. After rejecting voltage controllers as old technology, he began to examine LED lighting as a potential smart solution. In January 2010 he knew he had found the answer when installer Tom Klimes of Interior Control Ltd presented him with an LED high bay unit from Dialight, a UK based company specialising in applied LED technology.

The lighting challenge

Paul Cope describes the problems he wanted to solve: “We had two 3,250 square metre (35,000 sq ft) warehouses with a total of 84 x 450W HPS lamps operating 24/5 and Saturdays. Even though we are not constantly in and out of all bays in the warehouse all the time, the old lamps couldn’t be switched off as they took 10-15 minutes to re-strike, so I wanted a more energy efficient solution. And to be honest, the lighting was getting so that Lord Lucan could have hidden in our warehouse!”

“Then there’s the maintenance problem. With 15 metre high ceilings (49 ft) you need to bring in a cherry picker to replace failed lamps and you can’t have people working underneath. That means we’d typically wait until 4-8 lamps had failed before hiring the scissor lift over a weekend to replace them. This was costing about £2,000 annually.”

“On top of that the HPS lamps are fragile and hang about 4-5 feet from the ceiling, so that just puts them in the range of an extended pallet truck. It was quite common to lose a few of them that way.”

How the challenge was overcome with LED lighting

Interior Control replaced the 84 x 450W HPS lamps on a one-to-one basis with Dialight’s DuroSite™ Series LED High Bay. This highly robust 150W fitting features eight arrays in a compact oval pattern that enables it to direct light efficiently with less wastage and delivers an immediate saving in power of 66%.

Unlike HPS, the LED lighting has instant-on ability, so it works well with occupancy sensors and this has further increased energy saving to 72% as well as reducing carbon emissions by over 100 tonnes per year. The oval pattern of the arrays also means less wasted light on racking and more directed at floor level in the aisles where 110 lux was measured under the HPS, which had dimmed over time, increasing to 221 lux after the installation of the LED High Bays.

Tom Klimes comments: “We’ve removed the maintenance burden by fitting LED lighting, as these High Bays are warranted for five years of continuous performance and you can expect them to last ten or more if they’re not in use 24/7. Also, they hang only two feet from the ceiling and are very robustly constructed, so the lights are no longer vulnerable to being clipped by extended pallet trucks. With LED lighting you really can ‘fit and forget’.”

He adds: “We could probably have got away with fitting two LED for three HPS rather than one-for-one, but chose instead to avoid the cost of rewiring. As a result you might think we’ve over-lit, but the March Foods warehouse workers love it. One of them even says that now he feels noticeably less tired at the end of a night shift.”

Why we chose Dialight

Tom Klimes explains his choice: “For this job we went straight for an LED solution and Dialight’s High Bays were the only ones we liked. You can see the quality – they’re solidly built, durable and they come with a five-year warranty from a £77 million UK-based company rather than a three-year warranty from somewhere in China. They also incorporate top quality Cree LEDs and the drivers are well built to a good specification. All in all a sound product and their customer service people are great to work with.”

Funding and payback

As a British SME, March Foods was able to have its LED installation funded by a 4-year interest-free loan of £38,000 from the Carbon Trust which offers a £1,000 loan for every 2.5 tonnes of CO2 saved, so the capital expenditure is effectively funded by the energy savings. Having originally underestimated the energy savings to be made from using occupancy sensors Paul Cope now estimates that payback will take less than three years and may even be six months sooner than that when movements in electricity prices are taken into account. He reasons that with this sort of payback period it makes sense to retrofit LEDs even if you have a lease of 5 years or less on your building.

Looking ahead

March Foods are so pleased with this solution that they’re happy to be a reference site,” said Tom Klimes, “and we’ve already taken a couple of other customers to see the installation who were very positive about it. They both operate 24/7 and can immediately see the benefits of LED lighting for companies like them.” He adds, “This is our first experience of having the Carbon Trust provide the loan for a customer, but now we’re finding lots of people wanting to take advantage of it to help them deploy energy saving technologies.”

Paul Cope says: “We’re delighted with our LED lights and the five-year guarantee is very important for us. I insist on a spotless warehouse, so I really like the brightness. In fact we’re now thinking of going LED in the loading bay between the warehouses and even in the offices.”

March Foods warehouse with SON lights March Foods warehouse with LED lights

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