darkoshi: (Default)
Darkoshi ([personal profile] darkoshi) wrote2021-07-20 11:59 pm
Entry tags:

light bulbs and energy use

I thought I had switched out most light bulbs in my house to LED bulbs by now.
But I just counted them and was surprised by how many CFLs I still have.
I wonder if I should replace them with LED bulbs even though they're still working fine?

And I wonder if I do replace them, should I take the CFLs to a recycling drop-off, or ask if anyone around here wants them? Doing the latter might just shift the higher energy consumption from me to someone else. Or are there people still using incandescents who might appreciate "upgrading" to CFLs for free?

I may even still have a few incandescents in use myself, in 2 ceiling light fixtures where the glass shade covers the bulbs, so one can't easily tell. Too much of a bother to check, and they are in the hallway and washer-dryer nook where I don't usually leave the lights on for a long time anyway. But I really ought to get out the step-stool and check them sometime.
frith: Blue pegasus with rainbow mane, thinking in cloud (FIM Rainbow think)

[personal profile] frith 2021-07-22 01:23 am (UTC)(link)
I think that it would be wasteful to swap out the CFL's before they burn out. I think we don't properly appreciate the environmental cost of mining the terbium (a rare earth metal), of the mercury and manufacture of all the components that go into a compact fluorescent bulb (idem, a LED "bulb"), and the trouble in properly recycling these complex lights. It all screams green washing and consumer facilitation, much like how the proliferation of the triangular symbols on plastics helped the plastic industry convince us that it's OK to wrap _everything_ in plastic. Now light pollution is the worst it has ever been and it's only getting worse.