residential lighting led and cfl lamps
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Residential Lighting LED and CFL Lamps. Regional Technical Forum April 23, 2014. LED Measure Overview. Current Category: Proven Current Status: Active Current Sunset Date: April 30, 2014 Reason for Update/Review: Sunset date . CFL and Specialty CFL Measure Overview. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Residential LightingLED and CFL Lamps
Regional Technical ForumApril 23, 2014
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LED Measure Overview
• Current Category: Proven
• Current Status: Active
• Current Sunset Date: April 30, 2014
• Reason for Update/Review: Sunset date
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CFL and Specialty CFL Measure Overview
• Current Category: Proven
• Current Status: Active
• Current Sunset Date: January 31, 2017
• Reason for Update/Review: Reduce number of measures (broadermeasure identifiers) Standardize measure identifiers acrossLED and CFL measures.Standardize data sources across LED andCFL measures.
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Background
• CFLs and Specialty CFLs – Most recent update in October, 2013. Sunset date: January 2017
• LEDs – Most recent updates February 2013 and August 2013 (more delivery mechanisms). Sunset date: April 2014.
• RTF Residential Lighting Subcommittee formed in February in preparation for upcoming LED sunset.
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Staff Highlighted Areas (1)• Baseline is RBSA, not current sales. This assumption may not be
accurate given EISA, changes in the market (e.g. there are very few LEDs in RBSA), and large differences in product lifetimes.
• Analysis assumes lumen-for-lumen measures. This hypothesis has not been tested.
• Retail analysis assumes all lamps are used in residential applications. There is anecdotal evidence that as much as 15% of lamps end up in commercial applications (different HOU) (see October 2013 CFL presentation).
• Analysis assumes RBSA incandescent lamps are reduced to EISA standard, NOT to CFLs, as some would assume.
Is there an appetite for sales-volume research to address these uncertainties?
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Staff Highlighted Areas (2)• Data gap filling – Staff have estimated CFL and LED cost
and performance for hypothetical products in order to develop measures for all permutations of measure identifiers. (e.g. LED 3-Way). Is this acceptable? In some cases, the savings are extremely high.
• Storage rate effects - Savings and lifetime are adjusted to account for storage rate, as per the October 2013 RTF decision regarding CFLs.
• Incremental cost is negative for some retail CFLs. Incremental cost is set to $0 for these cases.
• Fixtures are not included in this analysis. Staff plan to develop a separate analysis for LED fixtures.
7Current CFL and LED MeasuresCurrent LED Current CFL, CFL Fixture & Specialty CFL
Hours of UseBaseline definitionBaseline lamp wattage RBSA, by tech type, lamp type, room type RBSA, by tech type, lamp type, room typeEE lamp wattage EnergyStar product list BPA Simple Steps program data
Delivery MechanismsRetailDirect InstallMail-by-Request, Give-Away
RetailDirect InstallMail-by-RequestUnsolicited-MailingGive-AwayNEEA Socket Count (no fixtures)
EE Cost PSE 2013 program data BPA Simple Steps program data
Baseline CostInc/Hal - 2013 RTF staff shelf surveyCFL - ETO shelf survey
Inc/Hal - ETO 2012-2013 Shelf SurveyCFL - BPA Simple Steps program data
Lifetime Ceiling at 12 years
CFL - [10,000 hours] * [derating for on/off switching] / [hours per year (by room type)]
Cold Cathode CFL - [25,000 hours] * [derating for on/off switching] / [hours per year (by room type)]
Eligibility
Measure Combinations
Retail/MbR/GA - 18 each = [3 lamp type] x [6 lumen bins]
Direct Install - 756 = [14 room type] x [3 tech type] x [3 lamp type] x [6 lumen bins]
Retail/MbR/GA/Unsolicited Mail - 60 each = [10 lamp type] x [6 lumen bins]
Direct Install - 600 = [5 room type groups] x [2 tech type] x [10 lamp type] x [6 lumen bins]
KEMA & DOE, by room typeRBSA observed mix of inc/hal/CFL
Meets Energy Star criteria.
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March 4, 2014 March 25, 2014Rebecca Blanton (PSE) X XJanice Bowman (Ecova) XAimee Brown (CLEAResult) XRyan Crews (CLEAResult) XRyan Firestone (RTF staff) X XJenni Francis (BPA) X XColin Gibbs (CLEAResult) XEric Koch (Applied Proactive Technologies) X XAaron Milano (PECI) X XHillary Olson (Snohomish PUD) X XNick O’Neil (RTF staff) X XBrien Sipe (CLEAResult) X XJoel Smith (PSE) X XJeremy Stewart (Tacoma Power) X XDavid Thompson (Avista) X XJohn Voldal (Colehour + Cohen) X X
Residential Lighting Subcommittee• Attendance
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Residential Lighting Subcommittee
• Guidance for RTF Staff:– Reduce the number of measures– Standardize measure identifiers across CFL and LED
measures– Use LED cost and performance forecasts (PNNL) for
measure update– Update CFL measure ahead of sunset date to reflect
new measure identifiers– Do not pursue broader categorization (e.g., “Any
LED”) if it would require a provisional measure.
10Subcommittee - Measure Grouping• After discussion with the Subcommittee, Staff suggested that the following level of
granularity:
– Existing Technology Type: with EISA standards applied, we’ve seen that Incandescent and Halogen baselines are about the same. It’s OK to group these together.
– Space Type: from what we’ve heard from the subcommittee, these three space types capture their programs and differences in hours-of-use within each category are relatively minor. We expect RBSA to be representative of program activity, so it’s OK to group spaces.
– Lamp Type: this is the level of granularity that we have good data on. – Lumen Category: each lumen category reflects a distinct product
• Subcommittee requested two further reductions to the categorization:– Merge the 6 lumen categories into 3– Merge “Globe” lamp type with “Decorative and Mini-Base”
Existing Technology Type (DI only) Space Type (DI only) Lamp Type Lumen CategoryIncandescent or Halogen Exterior Decorative and Mini-Base 250 to 369 lumensCFL (LED only) Interior, high and medium usage room types General Purpose and Dimmable 370 to 664 lumens
Interior, low usage room types Globe* 665 to 1014 lumensReflectors and Outdoor 1015 to 1439 lumensThree-Way 1440 to 2019 lumens
2020 to 2600 lumens
11Subcommittee Lumen Bins – Can we go from 6 to 3?
• The following grouping was proposed:
• But we know that there are distinct products in each of the six RTF lumen categories.
• If we are to group products from two RTF lumen categories into a single lumen category, we need to take weighted average results from two distinct measures. The weighting comes from RBSA, but program weighting may be different.
• The RTF does not have a firm policy on how granular measure identifiers should be, but in general we will forego granularity if it does not alter expected claimed savings by more than 10%.
Current RTF Lumen Categories
Incandescent Equivalent
Wattage Proposed Categories250 to 369 lumens 25W
370 to 664 lumens 40W
665 to 1014 lumens 60W
1015 to 1439 lumens 75W
1440 to 2019 lumens 100W2020 to 2600 lumens 150W
250 - 664 lumens
665 - 1439 lumens
1440 - 2600 lumens
12SubcommitteeLumen Bins – Can we go from 6 to 3?
• Staff have devised two tests to see how significant the resolution of our savings estimates is compromised by grouping lumen bins:
• 1) How sensitive are the RBSA results to variation in weighting?– For each pair of measures that would be grouped together:
• Identify the portion of RBSA lamps in both categories• Identify the percentage point difference in program proportions that
would lead to a 10% difference in savings
• 2) How different would program claimed savings be under the two categorization schemes?– For each pair of measures that would be grouped together:
• Identify the percentage change in savings if the program counted savings using one lumen bin, relative to using two lumen bins
SubcommitteeLumen Bin Grouping Sensitivity
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• LED DI measures, incandescent/ halogen baseline
Inc/Hal to LED DI measures are
not very sensitive to
differences in RBSA and program
proportions
This is an example. See subcommittee presentation for full set of results.
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Residential Lighting SubcommitteeConclusions – Measure Identifiers• Moving from 6 lumen categories to 3 looks good.
– This wouldn’t work for a CFL to LED direct install measure. Subcommittee was OK not including this measure for the sake of having less measure identifiers.
– There is some risk of getting the weights wrong on general purpose CFLs, but program data to date shows similar distributions of lamps as RBSA.
• Grouping Globes with Decorative and Mini-base doesn’t look good.
• Grouping 75W equivalent lamps with 60W equivalent lamps has less risk than grouping 75W equivalent lamps with 100W equivalent lamps.
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Residential Lighting Subcommittee
Final Measure IdentifiersExisting Technology Type (DI only) Space Type (DI only) Lamp Type Lumen CategoryIncandescent or Halogen Exterior Decorative and Mini-Base 250 to 664 lumens
Interior, high and medium usage room types General Purpose and Dimmable 665 to 1439 lumensInterior, low usage room types Globe 1440 to 2600 lumens
Reflectors and OutdoorThree-Way
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Methodology – Baseline Determination• For each RBSA record, assign:– EISA / IRL adjusted wattage (based on lamp category,
wattage)
– hours of use, by room type (KEMA, DOE)
– lamp lifetime, by lamp category. • CFLs lifetimes are derated as a function of room type.
– baseline lamp cost, by lamp category and lumen bin. • Incandescent and halogen costs are from the ETO shelf survey,
• CFL and LED costs are from Simple Steps program database (BPA and additional utilities that contract with CLEAResults).
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• For each combination of categories
– Determine the total regional weight of the category.
• The is the product of the number of lamps per fixture, number of fixtures per room, and the site survey weight of each record (i.e. how many bulbs each record represents)
– Determine the weighted average
• Baseline EISA / IRL adjusted wattage
• HOU
• Lifetime
• HVAC interaction applicability (0% for “exterior” and “garage” room types, 100% for all other room types)
• Baseline lamp cost
Methodology – Baseline Determination
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Analysis MapRBSA SF/MF/MH Lighting
RBSA_Lighting_Metatable.xlsx
Residential Lighting Baseline Table 2014_04_07.xlsx
ResLighting_CFLandLEDLamps_v01.xlsx
• Baseline lamp data – efficacy, lifetime, cost
• Lifetime adjustments for CFL switching patterns
• EISA and IRL Specifications• Hours of use by RBSA room
type• Efficient lamp data
• Efficacy (EnergyStar),• Lifetime (EnergyStar)• Cost (programs)• LED efficacy and cost
forecasts (PNNL)
Compiled RBSA data
Complete baseline dataset
19Data Availability
How data gaps are handled:• If RBSA data does not exist – set measure savings to zero.• If Energy Star or Simple Steps data does not exist – extrapolate data from similar product (same lamp
type, lower lumens, or different lamp type, same lumens).RTF Decisions: • Should we include measures that we don’t have efficient case data for?• Can we group Three-Way lamps with General Purpose and Dimmable?
Lamp Type Lumen Cateogry
Moderate and High-
use InteriorLow-use Interior Exterior
Energy Star QPL
(efficacy, lifetime)
Simple Steps (cost)
Energy Star QPL
(efficacy, lifetime)
Simple Steps (cost)
250 to 664 lumens 1386 494 70 13 4332 74 0665 to 1439 lumens 353 179 33 1 2572 0 01440 to 2600 lumens 11 5 1 0 0 0 0250 to 664 lumens 1738 934 100 73 8813 64 497665 to 1439 lumens 7807 4623 1025 313 42110 178 8441440 to 2600 lumens 1190 485 153 144 20038 23 0250 to 664 lumens 163 691 9 19 8940 69 144665 to 1439 lumens 143 405 8 13 4959 3 01440 to 2600 lumens 42 17 1 0 0 0 0250 to 664 lumens 235 93 16 25 11910 460 767665 to 1439 lumens 1395 873 442 60 35018 998 22171440 to 2600 lumens 42 80 205 0 10 17 0250 to 664 lumens 6 1 0 0 0 0 0665 to 1439 lumens 105 3 0 0 4816 0 01440 to 2600 lumens 528 46 2 9 3810 0 0
Globe
Reflectors and Outdoor
Three-Way
RBSA (Baseline wattage, HOU, conditioned space) LEDsCFLs
Decorative and Mini-Base
General Purpose and Dimmable
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Measure Analysis and Inputs Details
• Go to the following sections in the Summary tab in the proposed measure workbook:– Constant Parameters– Energy Savings Estimation Method, Parameters
and Data Sources– Measure Incremental Costs and Benefits– Measure Lifetime
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Savings, Cost, & Cost EffectivenessMost significant reasons for differences in current and proposed results:• EISA 2014 Standards - Current LED analysis does not include EISA 2014
standards (60W and 40W equivalent lamps). Proposed LED analysis does. – Current and Proposed CFL analyses include 2014 EISA.
• Lumen-for-lumen handling - Switch from using average wattage from efficient case datasets, to using average efficacy, and lumen matching to average base case.
• IRL Standard - Better handling of Incandescent Reflector Lamp federal standard.
• Imperfect mapping for comparison - Current LED omnidirectional lamp results are compared to proposed General Purpose, Globe, and Three-Way; the current Globe and Three-Way results are heavily influenced by the current General Purpose results.
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Sample of Savings Results• Direct Install, LED
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Sample of Savings Results• Retail, LED
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Sample of Savings Results• Direct Install, CFL
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Sample of Savings Results• Retail, CFL
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Sample of TRC BC Results• Direct Install, LED
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Sample of TRC BC Results• Retail, LED
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Sample of TRC BC Results• Direct Install, CFL
Y-axis capped at 10
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Sample of TRC BC Results• Retail, CFL
Y-axis capped at 10
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Savings, Cost, & Cost Effectiveness
• Pivot charts are included in the Measure Assessment Workbook to view Savings, Cost, and Cost-effectiveness for all Delivery Mechanisms and Efficient Technologies (CFL, LED).
• Go to the following sections in the Presentation tab in the proposed measure workbook:– Comparison-Savings– Comparison-Cost– Comparison-TRC BC
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RTF Staff Recommendation• Regional commitment to research the questions on Slide 5 in time for
measure update next year.• Group Three-Way with General Purpose and Dimmable. Three-way has
relatively small volume in RBSA, programs, and Energy Star and there may be cross-shopping between these lamp types.
• Approve LED and CFL lamp measures as presented– Using the proposed measure identification categories (3 room types, 5 4 lamp types,
3 lumen categories)– Allow data-gap filling for efficient lamp datasets
• Set the measure category to “Proven”• Set the measure status to “Active”• Set the sunset date to June 2015 (allows one year for new data plus two
months for Staff analysis).• Develop a Residential LED Fixtures measure set for presentation to the RTF in
summer 2014.
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Proposed Decision
“I _______________ move that the RTF:• Approve LED and CFL lamp measures as presented• Using the proposed measure identification categories
(3 room types, [5] or [4] lamp types, 3 lumen categories)
• Set the measure category to “Proven”• Set the measure status to “Active”• Set the sunset date to June 2015
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Appendix: Storage Rate Slides from October 2013 CFL Presentation
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Accounting for Storage Rate• To date, the RTF has not counted savings for energy efficient
equipment that is installed later on.• But there is evidence that most CFLs eventually get installed,
probably within a few years of purchase or receipt.• How should the RTF account for stored-but-eventually-used
products?
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Storage Rate – Lifetime Guidelines1.2.2. Measure Lifetime• Measure lifetime is defined as the median number of years during which at
least half the deliveries of a measure are in place and operable, i.e., produce savings. Measure lifetime should not be confused with a measure’s sunset date, which is the period during which a measure’s savings estimation method is RTF-approved.
2.3.1. Factors Affecting Lifetime• Many factors may have a substantial impact on measure lifetime. All
substantial factors should be considered in the estimation. A factor is substantial if it would increase or decrease the measure lifetime by at least 20%.
• Factors that may be relevant to measure lifetime include, but are not limited to, the following.– Program delivery method. Measures directly installed may last longer than measures
delivered via mail for self-install, because self-installers may be less skilled and may not install according to manufacturer expectations, such as appropriate placement.
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Storage Rate – CFL Failure
• Lamps installed right away (e.g., direct install)
Source: Review of Massachusetts tracking data. Lynn Hoefgen et al., 2013, “Study It ‘til You’re Sick of It: CFL Research as an Example of Other Efficiency Markets”, 2013 International Energy Program Evaluation Conference.
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Storage Rate – CFL Failure
• But not all retail lamps get installed right away
Assumes that 24% of lamps are installed at time of receipt, and 8% of lamps are installed in each of the subsequent 3 years.
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Storage Rate – CFL Failure
• But not all retail lamps get installed right awayNote:1) Installation rate
increases in first few years
2) But some lamps installed in the first couple of years are already failing
3) The lifetime of the retail measure (6.1) is longer than that of the direct install measure (5.5).
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Storage Rate – Savings GuidelinesRoadmap 1.3.2. Savings• “Savings is defined as the difference in energy
use between the baseline (see section 3.2) and post (after measure delivery) periods, which is caused by the delivery of a measure.”– Not clear on how to specify savings with unusual
decay functions.– Historically, RTF has used first year savings, except
for Last Measure In (LMI) measures.
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Storage Rate – Questions• What should the savings value represent?
– First year savings?– Maximum savings before end of EUL?– Average savings from measure start until death of last unit?– Something else?
• The answer to this should inform how to handle storage rates for CFLs, where we – know the patterns of failure overtime, and – think we know when stored bulbs eventually get used
• Staff proposal: – Use first year savings– Use failure and installation patterns to estimate median time to 50% installation. This complies with
the Guidelines.– Guidelines Issue: This does not lead to the correct lifetime savings (savings x EUL).
[RTF approved this proposal at the October 2013 RTF meeting]
• Staff also received a proposal to disregard storage rate because the stored lamps tend to get installed within a few years. This has been discussed at previous RTF meetings.