Take-Back
by the Numbers
Here’s how the evaluation of savings from compact
fluorescent bulbs can go wrong. The root problem is the take-back
effect. But evaluators amplify the problem by basing calculations on
new bulbs and not on the ones replaced (since they don’t know
what was replaced).
• Replace a 40-watt incandescent bulb with a
100-watt-equivalent compact fluorescent lamp (CFL).
• The CFL uses 23 watts.
• The actual savings is 17 watts.
• CFL program evaluation assumes that when a
100-watt CFL is used, it replaces a 100-watt incandescent bulb (they
can’t tell, so they make this guess).
• Replacing a 100-watt bulb with a 23-watt bulb
saves 77 watts.
• Calculated savings: 77 watts. Actual savings: 17
watts.
In addition, because the
light is cheaper, people may leave it on more, and the savings could
actually be zero. This is an extreme case, but it happened in my
kitchen. Most efficiency gains are not lost to the take-back
effect—at least not right away.
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