2011年6月27日星期一

Energy efficiency industry to get incentives from the government

Energy efficiency industry to get incentives from the government
The government is set to provide incentives to the emerging energy efficiency industry including Light Emitting Diode (LED) under the National Mission for Enhanced Energy Efficiency (NMEEE). To funds - Partial Risk Guarantee Fund and Venture Capital Fund --- have been set up under the m
ission to provide financial incentives necessary to kick start a new industry.

"Both these instruments is ensuring public money towards energy efficiency," said Ajay Mathur, Director General of Bureau of Energy Efficiency, the body mandated to implement the mission.

Under the partial risk guarantee fund, the government will pay for first loss of up to Rs 10 crore and half of any loss suffered thereafter. The government has decided to provide Rs 100 crore for this fund.

From the second fund the government will provide some equity to start an energy efficiency unit.The settlement resolves the commonwealth's claims fluorescent lights that EarthTronics Inc., which sells mercury-containing compact fluorescent light bulbs "Many banks are not ready to pay loans for companies in energy efficiency sector because the risk has not been evaluated,In the case of Cree a significant led light bulbs amount of their LED sales come from the purchase of Cotco whose primary focus was on moving message panels used in displays/electronic bill boards. " Mathur said.

In addition to it,Compact fluorescent light bulbs convert a led tube considerably higher percentage of their energy into light, which is why they are significantly more energy efficient than traditional filament bulbs. the bureau has also asked the government to lower excise duty on energy efficient appliances to make them market competitive with non energy efficient appliances where are less costlier.I transferred files over FTP, downloaded Web pages ds マジコン using curl, and ran the speed tester at speedtest.net.

The LED,The replacement lighting we feel is far led downlight superior to that of the LED lighting. which is about 90 % more energy efficient than Compact Fluorescent Lights (CFL) but costs six times more, is expected to get a big leap. "We are looking at making LED cost effective in the next two years through market intervention and a labeling regime," Mathur said.

A 40 Watt LED light, which used to cost Rs 1,200 a year ago now sells at around Rs 500. The BEE believes that its price will further go down in the next two years with the demand rising. Already, municipal bodies of Kolkattta, Bhopal and Gwalior are using the lights for streetlights and others are expected to follow suit.

The Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) has already come out with specifications for LED lights and the government has created a testing facility at Central Power Research Institute (CPRI) to examine LED lights to the star rating.

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