U.S. Department of Energy - Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
Weatherization & Intergovernmental Program
DOE Kicks Off Change a Light, Change the World Campaign
October 3, 2007
October 3rd marked the start of the 2007 Change a Light, Change the
World campaign. DOE kicked off the event at Wasatch Elementary School
in Salt Lake City, Utah, where students and the community were
encouraged to change at least one light bulb in their house to an
ENERGY STAR compact fluorescent light bulb (CFL). Meanwhile, the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) kicked off a 20-day, 10-city
national bus tour. The Change a Light, Change the World campaign
encourages all U.S. residents to take simple steps to help conserve
energy and pledge to change at least one bulb in their home to a CFL.
More than 500,000 people have already taken the online pledge to use
CFLs. See the
DOE and
EPA press releases.
CFLs use 75% less energy and last up to 10 times longer than standard
bulbs, and each CFL can save up to $35 in energy bills over the length
of its extended lifetime. If every U.S. resident replaced one light
bulb with a CFL, enough energy would be saved to light more than
3 million homes for a year, save more than $600 million in annual
energy costs, and prevent greenhouse gases equivalent to the emissions
of more than 800,000 cars. The Change a Light, Change the World
campaign is run in partnership by DOE, the EPA, the U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development, and hundreds of retail stores,
manufacturers, energy efficiency organizations, and state and
territory governments. To take the Change a Light pledge, visit the
ENERGY STAR site.
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