China announced on Friday it would phase out incandescent light bulbs within five years in an attempt to make the world’s most polluting nation more energy-efficient.
China will ban imports and sales of 100-watt and higher incandescent bulbs from Oct. 1 next year, China’s main planning agency said.
It will extend the ban to 60-watt and higher bulbs on Oct. 1, 2014, and to 15-watt and higher bulbs on Oct. 1, 2016. The time frame for the last step may be adjusted according to an evaluation in September 2016, the National Development and Reform Commission said.
Xinhua news agency quoted Xie Ji (謝極), deputy director of the commission’s environmental protection department, as saying China is the world’s largest producer of both energy-saving and incandescent bulbs.
Last year, China produced 3.85 billion incandescent bulbs, with 1.07 billion of those sold domestically, the planning agency said.
Lighting is estimated to account for about 12 percent of China’s total electricity use, it said.
Xie said the potential for energy saving and the reducing greenhouse gas emissions was huge.
China could save 48 billion kilowatt hours of power per year and reduce emissions of carbon dioxide by 48 million tonnes annually once the bulbs are phased out.
Several countries plan to phase out traditional light bulbs. The US is set to put standards in effect that essentially nudge them off store shelves over the next few years. The 27-nation EU agreed in 2008 to phase out the bulbs by next year.
The most common replacements are fluorescent and LED lights.
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