Govt
Bans 75-Watt Bulbs, Replaces with Mercury-Leaking ‘Efficient’ Bulbs
By Lisa Garber
theintelhub.com
January 4, 2013
The days of the 75-watt
incandescent light bulbs seem to be numbered. Stores may sell their existing
stock, but January 2nd’s new federal law is preparing to phase out
production and importation. Forty- and 60-watt incandescent bulbs will face the
same slow death next year.theintelhub.com
January 4, 2013
The government is instead favoring fluorescent bulbs
including CFLs, or compact fluorescent light, for the bulbs’ ability to use 75
percent less energy and last up to 10 times longer than incandescent. The
problem? Mercury exposure. While CFL’s mercury content has drawn fire—which is
usually snuffed out with instruction on proper disposal
techniques, what often goes unmentioned is growing unrest related to
research showing that CFLs may emit poisonous materials when switched on. These
materials include phenol, naphthalene, and styrene, which are, respectively,
harmful to the eyes, skin, respiratory tract, and kidneys; destructive to red
blood cells; and a suspected toxin to the gastrointestinal tract, kidney,
respiratory system, and more.
Carcinogens: Just
a Click Away
German scientist Peter Braun advises keeping “such carcinogenic substances…as far away as possible from the human
environment.” He even claims to use them “only very economically. They should
not be used in unventilated areas and definitely not in the proximity of the
head.”
Another study, published in Environmental Engineering Science, highlights the dangers
of CFLs once broken. Research by Yadong Li and Li Jin of Jackson State
University shows that while liquid mercury levels initially exposed after a
break are lower than Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulations for
“safe” mercury levels, mercury leaching actually increases over time to well above such
levels. Even if the broken material is quickly contained and disposed of,
mercury continues to leach into landfills and into groundwater, polluting our
drinking water and food supply.
Mercury Leaching
from Energy Consumption
Hoarding incandescent light bulbs won’t do much for
mercury leaching, however. The European Commission states that 4 percent of the EU’s total
energy consumption was dedicated to light bulbs (excluding spot lights). To
power these bulbs, no matter the type, the EU burns some coal, the very act of
which emits mercury. According to the EC, incandescent lamps result in the
highest mercury emissions to the environment per unit of light produced,
halogen lamps the least, and CFLs somewhere in the middle, taking into
consideration that only 20 percent of them are typically recycled and the rest
are inappropriately disposed of.
The EC also mentions that
any of the lamps discussed here result is around 20 times lower the amount
emitted from traditional dental practices. if that really matters.
The bag is mixed at the end of the day. One thing,
however, is clear: mercury is practically ubiquitous in our modern food and
environment, and whether from one kind of bulb or another, or from the coal
burning used to power them, more research is due before irreversible damage is
done to the planet and its inhabitants.
Additional Sources:
This
article originally appeared at Natural Society
1 comment:
I think the congress changed their mind and did not ban the incandescent bulbs yet. They will wait for the new LED's that are actually transistors and can be used for surveillance.
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