LED maker Cree and the City of Ann Arbor, Michigan, have announced that Ann Arbor will join
Raleigh, North Carolina and Toronto, Canada, in the growing LED City initiative.
In an effort to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and energy consumption, Ann Arbor plans to
become the first U.S. city to convert 100 percent of its downtown streetlights to LED
technology.
Ann Arbor expects to install more than 1,000 LED streetlights beginning next month, after a
successful trial of 25 fixtures. The City anticipates a 3.8-year payback on its initial investment.
Each LED fixture draws 56 watts and is projected to last 10 years, replacing fixtures with bulbs
that use more than 120 watts and last only two years.
“This decision is based on three years of extensive research on the energy and maintenance
savings associated with LED lighting, citizen surveys and a very successful pilot of 25 LED lights
spanning an entire city block,” said Mayor John Hieftje.
As a result, the City received a $630,000 grant from the Ann Arbor Downtown Development
Authority to fund retrofits for the downtown lights. “This initial installation should save the
City more than $100,000 per year and reduce annual greenhouse gas emissions by approximately 294
tons of CO2. Our plan is to retrofit all downtown lights with LED alternatives over the next two
years.”
Full implementation of LEDs is projected to cut Ann Arbor’s public lighting energy use in half
and reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 2,425 tons of CO2 annually, the equivalent of taking
400 cars off the road for a year. Detroit Edison, Ann Arbor’s local utility provider, will meter
the new LED streetlights with the intent to gather sufficient information to develop new LED-based
tariffs.
The LED streetlights currently installed in Ann Arbor are based on the New Westminster Series
made by Lumec, Inc., which contain LED light engines from Relume Technologies, Inc. In turn, the
Relume light engines contains Cree XLamp LEDs.
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