Uttar Pradesh could save 1,080 MW with CFLs: Official (Lead)
June 14th, 2010 - 12:15 am ICT by IANSLucknow, June 13 (IANS) The Uttar Pradesh Power Corporation (UPPCL) plans to save 1,080 MW power by selling energy efficient CFLs to its consumers at subsidised rates and also earn carbon credits in the process, its chief said Sunday.
“To begin with, as many as 300,000 CFLs will be distributed to consumers in Varanasi from the first week of July at a nominal price of Rs.12 in exchange for ordinary bulbs,” UPCL chairman Navneet Sehgal told reporters here Sunday.
Terming the new scheme as “the first step in this direction”, he said that the UPPCL has around 40 such projects in the pipeline to cover the entire state.
“Once implemented, these projects will enable saving of 1,080 MW of peak demand in the state along with cutting of the carbon emissions to the tune of 10 lakh Certified Emission Reductions (CERs),” he added.
“A maximum four CFLs of equivalent luminosity but lower wattage will be provided to a consumer. On the one hand, it would reduce the electricity bills of consumers and on the other, overall power consumption will be reduced.
“This will not only result in lesser use of incandescent lamps with higher carbon emissions but will also help in bringing down the power demand, leading to reduced coal burning and so carbon emissions into the environment will also be reduced drastically,” Sehgal explained.
The programme is being undertaken with the help of the United Nations Framework Convention for Climate Change (UNFCCC).
“The discarding of incandescent lamps and their replacement by CFLs will generate 18,365 CERs per annum, which amounts to removal of huge quantities of carbon from the atmosphere,” he said.
Britain’s EDF Trading will purchase the CERs, Sehgal said.
The UPPCL will not incur any cost in the implementation and instead will get 2.5 percent of carbon credits earned as a consequence of the project’s implementation. With an estimated cost of Rs 6.crore, the Varanasi project is planned to be completed by the end of September.
As per a cost and efficiency analysis, carried out by UPPCL, a 100 watt incandescent bulb costs Rs.15 and has a maximum lifespan of 1,000 hours and consumes power worth Rs.400 approximately in its lifetime, whereas a 20 watt CFL, though costing around Rs.125, has an average life of 6,000-10,000 hours and also consumes much less power.
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- Tamil Nadu bans incandescent bulbs to save power - Aug 20, 2010
- China to phase out incandescent lamps - Nov 04, 2011
- Chandigarh to launch project to popularise CFLs - Feb 17, 2010
- Himachal aims to earn carbon credits - Dec 08, 2010
- India to install 400 million power saver lamps - Sep 21, 2010
- India must manage energy demand efficiently: Shinde - May 05, 2010
- Reliance Power's Tilaiya project gets approval for carbon credits - Oct 03, 2011
- Karnataka mulls mandatory use of CFL bulbs - Feb 28, 2011
- Selling below cost no loss for 'green' bulb makers - May 03, 2009
- Himachal saves Rs.1 bn-worth power through CFLs - Jan 03, 2010
- Kerala to distribute CFL bulbs to 75 lakh households - Mar 13, 2010
- Reliance Power's Q1 operating revenues up 300 percent - Aug 11, 2011
- TN electricity board distributes electricity appliances to minimise power consumption - Dec 18, 2009
Tags: carbon credits, carbon emissions, cers, climate change, edf trading, electricity bills, emission reductions, framework convention, incandescent lamps, luminosity, mw power, navneet, peak demand, power consumption, rs 6, sehgal, selling energy, uppcl, varanasi, wattage