lighting council australia
TRANSCRIPT
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Lighting Council Australia
PRESENTATION TO GLOBAL LIGHTING ASSOCIATION
New Delhi
9 October 2012
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• Phasing-in efficient lighting
• Performance requirements for LEDs
• Disposal of mercury-containing lamps
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Topics
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1. Phasing-in efficient lighting
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Australian MEPS Regime
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Lamp types Sales restricted from
• Tungsten incandescent GLS Lamps
• ELV halogen non-reflector November 2009
• >40W candle, fancy round and
decorative lamps
• ELV halogen reflector
October 2010
• Mains voltage halogen non-reflector 1 January 2011
• 50 W halogen April 2012 (new regime: max 37 W)
• >25W candle, fancy round and
decorative lamps October 2012
• Mains voltage reflector lamps including
halogen (PAR, ER, R etc)
October 2013 - dependent on availability
of efficient replacement products
• Pilot lamps 25W and below To be determined - dependent on
availability of replacement products
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• A new MEPS regime was due to come into effect on 1
October 2012.
• However lighting industry unable to meet the stringent
requirements.
• As a consequence Australian regulator issued Regulatory
Ruling 43c which delays the application of full MEPS to MVH
reflector and non-reflector lamps by one year pending a
review of the availability of effective and efficient replacement
products.
• LCA’s position is that Australia should fall in line with
harmonised EU requirements.
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MEPS for mains voltage halogen
lamps
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• 50W halogen lamps imported to Australia after
April 2012 may no longer be sold
• Main replacements are 35W lamps and LEDs
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Phase-out of 50W
halogen lamps
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Australian regulator planning to:
• increase existing MEPS on fluorescent ballasts,
T12 and T8 lamps
• introduce MEPS on T5 lamps, circular lamps,
mercury vapour products, commercial luminaires
and LEDs
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Proposed MEPS
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2. Performance requirements for
LEDs
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• Currently no performance requirements in Australia
• However Australian regulator has stated its
intention to introduce MEPS – no details yet
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Performance
requirements for LEDs
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3. Disposal of mercury-containing
lamps
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• Currently no mandatory requirement to recycle lamps.
However some Australian states moving to ban Hg-
containing lamps from landfill.
• Australian Government funds LCA to run FluoroCycle, a
voluntary recycling program. Scheme persuades users of
lamps to recycle at their expense.
• Government has recently enacted product stewardship
legislation and identified Hg-containing lamps as a ‘waste of
concern’.
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Disposal of mercury-
containing lamps
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• Government funding of FluoroCycle scheme
finishes June 2013.
• Government has approached LCA to determine
lighting industry’s intentions after June 2013.
• LCA has resolved to continue the FluoroCycle
scheme and finance its administration from internal
resources and sponsorship from large lamp users.
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Disposal of mercury-
containing lamps
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SPARC International Lighting Event 2013
• Lighting industry trade show, conference, gala
dinner
• Held in conjunction with Vivid Sydney – festival of
light, music & ideas
• International exhibitors and delegates warmly
welcome
• Next event 4-6 June 2013
• www.sparcevent.org
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