Light Bulb Laws: The CFL Lobby vs. Personal Choice
If you read any personal finance blog, you will eventually come across a post recommending you save money by switching from incandescent light bulbs to compact fluorescents (CFLs). It’s a no-brainer – CFLs use only about 25% of the energy of incandescent bulbs, and they last longer, so you end up saving money despite the higher up-front cost. The lower energy consumption also means that less greenhouse gases are produced to provide the same amount of light. Even so, not everyone is choosing CFLs over incandescents. In the US, CFL market share is a mere 6%.
Consumer reluctance to switch to CFLs has resulted in government action in some countries. Australia and Canada have instituted bans on incandescent bulbs that will take effect in 2010 and 2012, respectively. Many other countries are contemplating similar measures, and various organizations are lobbying for them. But there’s a cultural cost included in these kinds of laws.
I don’t want to start a global warming debate here, so let’s assume for the sake of argument that global warming is occurring, that the results of global warming will be harmful to all of us, and that it is caused to some degree by the greenhouse gas emissions of power plants. If this is true, then government action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions can be justified even from a libertarian perspective, because the negative environmental effects are a violation of property rights. The question then becomes what are the most cost-effective ways to reduce emissions.
The light bulb ban is one approach. Since 8.8% of household power consumption is for lighting, simply make it illegal to produce or sell incandescents. In one fell swoop, you’ve reduced household power consumption by over 6%.
But as a gay man, I’m very sensitive to government attempts to micromanage my life. I don’t want the government telling me how I should live – and that includes who I can sleep with, what sex toys I can buy, what goals I can save for, and what light bulbs I can use. I want the freedom to make my own choices, and I want to let other people make their own. Light bulb laws are a heavy-handed way of achieving a very narrow goal, and they remove individual choice and values from the equation. The cultural cost of light bulb laws is that they reinforce the idea that it’s ok for the government to make personal decisions for us.
There are many ways to save energy. Aside from lighting, there’s a whole other 91.2% of household power consumption. Heating and cooling account for 31%. Kitchen and laundry appliances account for another 33%. Maybe the people buying incandescents would rather save energy by upgrading appliances to newer, energy-efficient models, running the A/C less, turning down the temperature on their water heaters, line drying or flat drying their clothes, staying away from large power-hungry plasma TVs, etc. Or maybe they would rather use incandescents in their bedrooms while switching to fluorescents in their living areas. The point is that the decision on how to save energy should be up to them so they can make choices based on their own values.
So how do we reduce greenhouse gas emissions while preserving individual choice? There are a number of ways to go, but one study seems to indicate that an economy-wide market-based emissions trading scheme or similar would be the best option. The money can go toward carbon offsets, or reforestation, or spreading iron in the oceans or particulates in the upper atmosphere, or any number of other ways to counteract the effects of the greenhouse gases. The bottom line is that power generation that produces pollution should have the cleanup cost built in. That cost can be passed on to consumers, and consumers can choose how they want to save on that cost. Do they want to switch to a power generation company that uses more renewable sources to escape the emissions cost penalty? Do they want to switch to CFLs? Do they want to conserve energy some other way? Or do they want to just continue using as much energy as ever while paying for the cleanup? Just as the pay as you throw concept in trash disposal encourages waste reduction without telling you which waste to cut, passing on the cost of carbon emissions to consumers encourages energy conservation without forcing specific choices upon you.
If we leave these decisions in the hands of consumers, we reinforce the notion that this is a country of individuals with different values, and that it’s ok for people to choose different approaches to solving problems. If we take these decisions away from individuals, we can look forward to the day when someone lobbies for a ban on tampons and wants to force women to use the Mooncup to reduce waste.
Bill, I hadn’t viewed the light bulb issue from a “freedom of choice” perspective but you make some really great points. That said, rule-making is a difficult path for any government to tread. Remember the first smoking ban? Smokers initially freaked out in California, but ten years later, I never hear a complaint. And are we a healthier state because of it?
Anyway, thought-provoking post. Thanks.
Great points, Bill. Freedom of choice is certainly important. It’s true that some countries have banned incandescent bulbs altogether, but much of the proposed and enacted legislation involves banning the production of incandescents and/or the voluntary conversion to CFLs, and doesn’t specify personal use. So, theoretically, a person clinging to the use of incandescent bulbs could stock up now and use them for the rest of their life, at least in the U.S.
While it’s also true that energy savings could be made elsewhere, banning bulbs is an easy, classless, and gestural target for governments. And, sorry, choice does have responsible limits. If you don’t think so then maybe we should reverse that pesky 1986 ban on lead pipes for drinking water supplies, or go lobby against Sen. Patty Murray and her bill to eliminate most uses of asbestos.
I’d personally love a little external motivation to get me into that mooncup.
Thanks for the comments! In response…
Nina, that’s an “ends justify the means” argument. There are a lot of awful things we can force on people in the name of making them physically healthier, but using the end result to justify the loss of freedom is a slippery slope.
Aundi, if it were possible for people to install lead pipes in their houses and poison themselves without harming anyone else, then I would see no point in the lead pipe ban. The problem comes when they give water from those pipes to their children or unknowing guests – people who didn’t make that choice. The same goes for asbestos. Unlike poisonous materials, incandescents do not directly endanger anyone’s health, and it’s entirely possible to use them without causing any environmental harm at all, depending on how you power them.
In fact, if you use incandescents and power them with anything other than a coal-fired power plant, you’re releasing less mercury into the environment than someone who uses CFLs, no matter how those CFLs are powered. It could well be argued that a solar-powered lighting system using incandescents causes less environmental harm than a solar-powered lighting system using CFLs.
Very interesting Bill! And very relevant…I just replaced 15 incandescent 100 watt bulbs with 26 watt CFLs…saving me about $0.10/hour. Why did I do that? Because our local utility had a special that reduced the cost per bulb to only $0.99…truly a no-brainer. I think the best course is to have our utilities engage their customers…offer rebate enclosures with our monthly bills…hell, offer a mail-order service to have ’em delivered to you!
But I do have to say, there are certain government mandates that I wholly back…the smoking bans noted above, definitely…as I put it to several bar/club owners…I’ve been going out to such establishments for decades…and not one has ever offered an area or respite for non-smokers…so I have little sympathy for opposition to such bans!
Isn’t government’s essential role to assist where the private sector/free market fails…with effective regulation? And, at some point, this all rises to a national security and economic issue: how much longer will we continue to fund the bank accounts of our oil suppliers?
Thanks Mark! As far as market failures and oil, those deserve posts all their own. I’ll add them to my to-do list!
CFLs don’t emit mercury while simply screwed in or turned on, only when broken. The National Electrical Manufacturers Association has initiated a commitment program for manufacturers of CFLs that caps mercury content and ensures that disposal programs are environmentally safe. Incandescents might seem like they aren’t directly threatening environmental harm, but if global warming is in fact happening, the cumulative effect of individual elements will reach a point of no return in less than 2 decades. Millions of coastal residents might disagree with you.
Aundi, if incandescents are powered by clean energy (solar, wind, etc) they do not contribute to global warming. Thus, there is not a direct causal connection between incandescents and warming. It all depends on the power source. CFLs, by contrast, have a built-in environmental hazard that has to be dealt with.
As far as mercury, disposal programs are nice, but they work about as well as outlawing marijuana. There will always be people who don’t follow the program, and right now that’s actually the majority of CFL users. From http://www.zerowaste.org/cfl/IMAGES_A/phase_I_rpt.pdf: “According to the Northwest Compact Fluorescent Lamp Recycling Project, because household users have the option of disposing of these products in the same way they dispose of other solid waste, ‘a large majority of household CFLs are going to municipal solid waste’. They additionally note that an EPA report on mercury emissions from fluorescent tube lamp disposal indicates the percentage of total mercury released from the following disposal options: municipal waste landfill 3.2%, recycling 3%, municipal waste incineration 17.55% and hazardous waste disposal 0.2%.”
Personally, in considering what my dream home will look like in 10 years, I’ve considered the option of solar arrays. If my home was fully solar-powered, I might very well opt for incandescents to be sure my godson is never exposed to mercury.
I’m not arguing against the use of CFLs, however. I do currently use them in several fixtures. These are just examples of why someone might choose to cut 6% of their energy consumption in some other way. My point was that we should broadly encourage energy savings, while letting individuals decide what’s important to them and where they should cut back energy use, precisely because of disagreements like this.
It doesn’t make sense to pass a law that says “cut your energy consumption by 6% by using CFLs” when we can pass one that says “cut your fossil fuel energy consumption by 6% however you want, or use clean power”. The latter is more conducive to individual freedom than the former.
Peace in the Middle East!
I agree with some of what you’re saying; but until alternative energy sources are wide-spread (and classless) and hold court with capitalism, I still think the bulb should be banned.
Just would like to point out the inconvenient truth that the very creation and shipping of these “save the planet” lightbulbs causes more pollution than regular bulbs…as well as the sheer amount of mercury that is in them.
When they finally DO conk out, what do you think is going to happen to all of that? Huzzah! Mercury leaching into landfills. Wonderful that.
Heaven forbid you accidentally break one in your own home…legally you have to call poison control. Wonder how much THAT’ll cost/save you.
The CFL Mercury Nightmare by Steven Milloy, Financial Post
The contrast between what the people in that article were told by the EPA and what the EPA says in its cleanup guidelines is interesting: http://www.epa.gov/mercury/spills/index.htm. Apparently, not everyone is on the same page as to how dangerous the amount of mercury in a CFL is.
This discussion has definitely peaked my interest about what the lesser of the two evils actually is. I asked one of the head researchers at my university’s school of environmetal sciences if he had any info on the latest findings. Here’s what he wrote back:
“1) While it would be true that if you had a dedicated solar PV only powering light, it would not matter at the TIME OF OPERATION that it consumed more energy…it would be non-polluting in terms of CO2, etc. However, and depending on country concerned, the time to pay back the energy used in manufacturing — which in the case of solar is uniquely very high… — range from
about 2 years up to 8 years. This means that at very best, the energy yield is around 10; life time of solar PV is around 20 years but can be as low as 2.5. For ZICER [Zuckerman Institue for Connective Environmental Research]the figure we have computed through close
inventroy is 6 years, or an energy yield ratio of 3.3. As an incandescent bulb uses 5 times as much energy, if an energy yeild ratio is less than about 5, then it will not help plugging into a solar source except perhaps in very sunny climes. Even then, one would normally
have other appliances copnnected in anyway, so unless you were entirely self sufficient in solar — which is unlikely — running an incandescent light would mean more electricity would have to come from external fossil fuelled power stations.
2) regarding mercury:
There is an absolute limit of 6 mg per unit in US or 5 in EU. However, the average is probably round about 4mg.
It is estimated that 2.4 mg on average will be emitted during its life time, the remainder remains stuck to glass and might very slowly be released. Note that while bulb is intact, no mercury is released; it is only
released when broken. On the other hand, over the same life time the mecury emitted by generating electricity from conventional fossil fuels is as high as 10 mg over an equaivalent period, so actually the emissions from CFL will be less.
In some places they have special recycling facilities for CFL which take in unbroken bulbs and break them in a sealed environment so that they can recover the mercury. In such cases there is no burden at all from the mercury used.”
Thanks Aundi. On point #1, it’s interesting to see the researcher confirm that with an energy yield of 5, you could actually use incandescents with less environmental impact than using CFLs on a fossil fuel source. And that’s with today’s solar technology. When I build my dream home I’ll have to see how far the technology has come.
On point #2, he pretty much reiterated what’s in the Wikipedia article I linked to at the top of my post. The mercury emission numbers he’s using for incandescents once again assume fossil fuels as the power source. As soon as you change the power source to anything that doesn’t produce mercury, CFLs emit more mecury than incandescents. And as I pointed out in my previous reply, very few people seem to be using the CFL recycling programs.
However, in my post I never argued against the use of CFLs, and I certainly think they are one of the best and easiest ways for most people to conserve energy and pollute less (and save a little money to boot). My point was to illustrate the moral implications of light bulb laws – the fact that you’re forcing people to conserve energy in a certain way, taking the choice out of their hands. Light bulb laws don’t accomplish anything that you can’t accomplish with a more general law that actually preserves some modicum of freedom. And leaving individuals free to choose their own path is something gays and lesbians should be uniquely sensitive to.
From an environmental standpoint, a law that forces people to stop using incandescents is not in any way superior to a law that forces the same amount of pollution reduction while leaving the methods up to the individual, while from a moral standpoint, the latter law is clearly better.
Well, this has definitely been thought-provoking, and, most importantly, it’s encouraged me to revise my perspective on and enactment of freedom of choice, which I think was your intention.
I still do have my doubts about the wide-spread success of an “open ended” law that leaves so much up to a population that, as a majority, doesn’t even make the right decision when disposing of light bulbs. That is, unless serious fiscal motivators, rebates, incentives, etc. act concurrently to it.
I *so* agree with you! Market-based solutions are so crucial – regulations and laws do nothing to EDUCATE our society about what is the best choice and why! Great post.
Great post. I am not gay so don’t normally find or frequent such sights, but found your through google because of our common interest in the subject, i.e., yet more government coercion and the light bulb issue in particular.
In reading the posts here, it never fails to fascinate me how many people want to give up their freedom, and of course take the freedom away from others, whether the issue is light bulbs, health care or anythings else. It is always of course for the greater good. It never occurs to folks that passing such stupid laws as mandating the use of a certain types of light bulb, from certain manufacturers, who are no doubt delighted, forever prevents or hinders the flowering of other new energy saving lighting ideas from the other 4 billion people on he planet.
But yet they think Sen. Patty Murray, the sponsor of this ridiculous bill, knows the answer for all 300 million other Americans and you dear posters to this blog are most willing to go along with it.
For the very best discussion of this light bulb mandate issue I have ever seen, I recommend reading Virgina Postrel on the issue and its aesthetic implications, that is if you care about aesthetics or freedom.
http://www.dynamist.com/articles-speeches/dmag/lighting.html
And for the abundance of petty tyrants who write in to this blog and are amazed to hear reasonable arguments from this blog writer and others, please consider the same freedom issues on the million other issues you no doubt fall on the loss of freedom side every day. As for the person who wants to give up tampons for a plastic cup, please enjoy your freedom to do so, but please just don’t get near me or vote for any bills to make your neighbors do so or my wife or daughter.
Did it ever occur to any of you that just about every insane law like this almost always has two components and they are always for the “greater good”. First are the innocent well intended folks like most of you (cup girl excluded) who feel all warm and fuzzy about the environment and want people to think they are good, but never think through the implications of their wish for such petty tyranny. The other side are the lawmakers and special interest. In this case Senator Patty Murray and the people who will stand to make a killing on selling flourscent bulbs. Can you say Wal-Mart? Can you use google? There are already press releases everywhere by flourscent bulb makers trying to make p.r. hay and no doubt lots and lots of money from this new mandate. I have not checked the election records, but it would be interesting to see Sen. Murray’s contributors. Wonder how much Wal-Mart gave her? Ditto for the Sierra Club? Surprised to see the on the same side of the issue?
One of history’s best examples of this type of phenomenon
was when the government voted to prevent the sale of, not incandecent light bulbs, but alchohol, better known as prohibition. The well intentioned folks were the Baptist who were morally outraged at folks who like to drink. The special interest were the bootleggers, who made a fortune selling booze illegally. If you read a history of the time, you will find that the Baptist and the Bootleggers both supported the same politicians who were of course in favor of the ban. In the incandescent light bulb prohibition you will no doubt see both sides, the well intentioned, but wrong, and the special interest who plan to get rich.
The ultimate example and ultimate expression of this phenomenon is of course communism itself. The best examples being the former Soviet Union and China. If you ask those that were there for the revolution, you will find that the idea was always sold because it is for the greater good. 50,000,000 people were killed for this particular greater good. Hey what ever sacrifices it takes, righ cup girl. The followers were the well intentioned folks like yourselves who bought it without thinking through the implications. The leaders were the very special interest and the other party hacks. Humanity lost. They also lost with prohibition and they will also lose with mandated flourscent bulbs.
The only answer is freedom. Be careful when you so cavalierly give it up.
Good morning,
I am writing to implore Americans to wake up! I have been asking and as yet nobody seems to care about CFL’s and the danger they are set to pose to our world. So I have updated information and thank you for reading this. I still will continue to work to get this INSANE CFL bulb law reversed.
I thought for sure Congressman Poe might have been, but I was mistaken. I have written his writer, have not recieved a response. I am beginning to think it was a smoke and pony show for comedy relief on the house floor. I have begun a group to gain support to this end. This law must be reversed. It is not an option.
Simple math:
2008: An estimated 300 million bulbs bought in America. Each Bulb contains 5mg of extremely dangerous Mercury.
With this small amount of purchases, compared to where that number will grow, I believe you will see the answer is simply outrageous. WAL_MART is excited to plan on selling 100 MILLION of these bulbs this year. These numbers are mere guesses as to what the real number of sales are IN THE WORLD are is any ones guess. A law? If CFL’s were sooooo good we would not have needed an 882 page Law and the EPA would not have had to write a 3 page single spaced document regarding the uses and disposal of the same. We would not be scrambling to open haz waste disposal facilities for the same. I ask, where is intelligents today. Was it all used up in he times of our founders? This law was and is sheer lunacy.
This massive amount of Mercury is posed for our landfills and then into our water. The government and the EPA stance that the energy saving is worth the danger is ludicrous. There are many ways to save energy as well as lower emissions rather than this bulb law.
Indulge my little rant here: Last I read this government was of the people, by the people and for the people. The government has grossly overshot their position on this matter. I know it is not the first time, but as for me, I am tired of letting them get away with whatever they want at the people’s expense. Most people have thrown their hands in the air and allow the government to do as they please, and to this end we find ourselves in the positions we are today.
I aim to see this law REVERSED. I am looking to connect with anyone who feels the same. Congress passed this ridiculous law in darkness without informing the people. People had no knowledge of it, so therefore could not make an informed decision and or approve it. People are in the dark to the dangers these bulbs pose for us, our children (both born and unborn), our homes, landfills and our planet.
Look in any Chemical Handbook and you will be enlightened about the Dangers of Mercury – there is a reason it is handled with Iron Flasks. This law is sheer lunacy.
I know this was long and I am sorry to take your time, but as you may sense, I am passionate about the reversal of this law. How do you feel about it? If you read this far, I thank you. It is more important than anyone might realize.
Best to you,
Karen Nardella
Yet we are told that mercury is safe as a component of dental compounds in our teeth and used as a preservative in injections.
http://www.epa.gov/mercury/healthcare.htm
http://www.freepatentsonline.com/5154833.html
“Although such effluent streams contain only small quantities of such organic mercury compound, in the 100’s ppm range, such quantity is unacceptably high for disposal by simple sewering or other discharge to water bodies. Environmental regulation requires that the quantity of mercury discharged be less than 3 ppb.
Dilution of the effluent stream is not a practical alternative in view of the roughly 10,000 fold decrease in quantity of organic mercury required. Prior to the present invention, the applicant was unaware of any proposal which would decrease organic mercury levels in vaccine manufacture effluent streams to environmentally-acceptable acceptable levels, and which could accomplish the same in an efficient and inexpensive manner. “