speechlesstx
Mar 13, 2012, 08:33 AM
I know your arguments before you make them, "we have to start somewhere" blah, blah, blah. But why is our DOE awarding Philips $10 million for creating an "affordable" alternative that sells for $50?
$50 Light Bulb Wins Government Affordability Prize (http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/business/2012/03/50-light-bulb-wins-government-affordability-prize/)
The U.S. government has awarded appliance-maker Philips $10 million for devising an “affordable” alternative to today's standard 60-watt incandescent bulb. That standard bulb sells for around $1. The Philips alternative sells for $50.
Of course, the award-winner is no ordinary bulb. It uses only one-sixth the energy of an incandescent. And it lasts 30,000 hours–about 30 times as long. In fact, if you don't drop it, it may last 10 years or more.
But only the U.S. Government (in this case, the Department of Energy) could view a $50 bulb as cheap.
“I don't want to say it's exorbitant,” a Home Depot bulb-peddler quoted by The Washington Post demurs. He goes on to say, though, that he could see how a consumer shopping by price could come to that conclusion.
The Post says retailers are reluctant to this the bulb, lest they earn the wrath of Philips, a major supplier.
The Department of Energy created its so-called “L-Prize” to encourage manufacturers to come up with energy-efficient LED (light-emitting diode) alternatives to incandescent bulbs. To be deemed the winner, a bulb had to be affordable.
Yeah and they told me those ugly, pricey, hazardous CFLs would last me 7 years and they burned out at about the same rate as incandescent bulbs.
Texas Republican Rep. Michael Burgess said of giving Philips $10 million for a $50 bulb no one in their right mind will buy, “It just underscores the difficulty that we have in getting any kind of efficiency out of the Department of Energy, let alone energy efficiency.”
Government affordability, that's a good one. Can this regime be more out of touch with main street?
$50 Light Bulb Wins Government Affordability Prize (http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/business/2012/03/50-light-bulb-wins-government-affordability-prize/)
The U.S. government has awarded appliance-maker Philips $10 million for devising an “affordable” alternative to today's standard 60-watt incandescent bulb. That standard bulb sells for around $1. The Philips alternative sells for $50.
Of course, the award-winner is no ordinary bulb. It uses only one-sixth the energy of an incandescent. And it lasts 30,000 hours–about 30 times as long. In fact, if you don't drop it, it may last 10 years or more.
But only the U.S. Government (in this case, the Department of Energy) could view a $50 bulb as cheap.
“I don't want to say it's exorbitant,” a Home Depot bulb-peddler quoted by The Washington Post demurs. He goes on to say, though, that he could see how a consumer shopping by price could come to that conclusion.
The Post says retailers are reluctant to this the bulb, lest they earn the wrath of Philips, a major supplier.
The Department of Energy created its so-called “L-Prize” to encourage manufacturers to come up with energy-efficient LED (light-emitting diode) alternatives to incandescent bulbs. To be deemed the winner, a bulb had to be affordable.
Yeah and they told me those ugly, pricey, hazardous CFLs would last me 7 years and they burned out at about the same rate as incandescent bulbs.
Texas Republican Rep. Michael Burgess said of giving Philips $10 million for a $50 bulb no one in their right mind will buy, “It just underscores the difficulty that we have in getting any kind of efficiency out of the Department of Energy, let alone energy efficiency.”
Government affordability, that's a good one. Can this regime be more out of touch with main street?