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'Switching to LED lighting can help the EU in its race to zero emission'


In the EU, where lighting is estimated to be responsible for around 10% of all electricity use, findings by Signify  reveal that by upgrading conventional luminaires to LED presents the union with a significant opportunity to help it achieve net zero carbon emissions in 2050.

Such a switch will further help the 27 member states meet the goals of the European Green Deal and deliver on their commitments as part of the Paris Agreement.

Upgrading the EU’s existing 2.3 billion conventional luminaires to LED will reduce the amount of CO2 emissions by 50.9 million tonnes. This is the equivalent of CO2 that 2.3 billion trees - a forest larger than the United Kingdom - would sequester in a year.

The electricity savings would amount to 188.5 TWh, which is the equivalent of the annual consumption of 51.8 million households or more than a quarter of all the households in the EU. This translates into EUR 40 billion in savings on electricity costs per year across the 27 member states. Additionally, for every EUR 1 million invested in energy renovation of buildings, an average of 18 jobs are created in the EU.2

Upgrading professional lighting, which includes the lighting in offices, industrial complexes, roads and parks, and in shops and hotels, presents the biggest opportunity with a potential reduction of CO2 emissions of 42 million tonnes. Furthermore, it is one the quickest and least intrusive parts of a building renovation, while providing the highest electricity savings of any replacement technology.

Additionally, having EU citizens upgrade all their residential lighting, would reduce CO2 emissions by 8.9 million tonnes per year.

Signify calls upon the EU to more than double the rate of building renovations to 3% per year and to make the switch to smart LED lighting. This should also be accompanied by an EU-wide public information program targeted at consumers to explain the environmental and economic benefits of making the switch in their homes.

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