Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Red Lobster In San Antonio Awarded Silver LEED Certification

As reported on Chain Store Age website.

Darden Restaurants, owner of Red Lobster and Olive Garden banners among others, said Monday that its Red Lobster restaurant in Centerview, San Antonio, is one of the company’s first to receive sustainability recognition.
The restaurant was awarded Silver certification for LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) for New Construction from the U.S. Green Building Council.

The 7,029-sq.-ft. restaurant, which opened in March, features a number of sustainable design elements, including recycled building materials, increased use of natural light, and energy-efficient equipment and fixtures, including low-flow water nozzles in the kitchen and low-flow faucets in the restrooms, new LED parking lot light lighting and low-wattage energy-efficient lighting, and heat recovery tanks that allow the capture of heat generated from the freezer/cooler compressors to aid in supplemental heating of hot water.

The effort is part of Darden Restaurant's Sustainable Restaurant Design initiative, which aims to reduce energy and water use in 1,800 restaurants by 15% by the year 2015.

LED Lighting Retrofits
 
A good practice for businesses looking to reduce energy expenses is to consider an LED lighting retrofit for their parking garage . Lighting retrofits replace lighting with newer technology such as LED linear lighting to save on energy costs and maintenance costs. Many parking garage consultants recommend a parking garage LED lighting retrofit as the first step to reducing energy costs. Redbird LED is an Atlanta based manufacturer and designer of Premium LED lights at value price points. For more information please visit their LED Retrofit website or call ( 678) 733-2473

San Jose State University Wins Award For Energy Efficient Lighting Retrofit

San Jose State University received a Best Practice Award in the Lighting Retrofit category for implementing lighting system upgrades and controls projects at its highly acclaimed Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Library as part of a SiteSMART commissioning services project. The project included installing occupancy sensors on the library book stack lighting, retrofitting inefficient ceiling fixtures, and converting to spectrally enhanced (5000 K) lighting. These measures reduced energy consumption at the building by 22 percent while significantly enhancing building aesthetics. The project is saving over $300,000 and more than 1,900,000 kWh annually.

The 2010 Best Practice Awards Competition for the Energy Efficiency Partnership program seeks to highlight the achievements that California State University, University of California, and California Community College campuses have made through innovative and effective energy efficiency projects and sustainable operations.

LED Lighting Retrofits
 
A good practice for businesses looking to reduce energy expenses is to consider an LED lighting retrofit. Lighting retrofits replace lighting with newer technology such as LED linear lighting to save on energy costs and maintenance costs. Many building experts recommend a lighting retrofit as the first step to reducing energy costs. Redbird LED is an Atlanta based manufacturer and designer of Premium LED lights at value price points. For more information please visit their LED Retrofit website or call ( 678) 733-2473

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Warehouses Pursue Energy Efficient Lighting with LED Retrofit

Aside from labor, the most significant cost of operating a cold storage facility is the expense associated with creating a cool environment. A refrigerated or frozen warehouse’s energy bill can vary by thousands or tens of thousands of dollars each month, making the need to control energy costs and increase efficiencies critical.


Innovative-Cold-Storage-San-Diego-3.jpg
Using LED lighting in a cold storage environment helps to ensure that the lighting doesn’t work against the nature of the facility. Photo courtesy of BetaLED.
Cold storage facilities require substantial amounts of electricity to maintain the proper temperatures necessary for preserving foods and beverages. In fact, electricity costs can comprise more than 25 percent of a cold storage building’s ongoing operating costs.[1]

Conventional lighting and refrigeration systems typically work against each other: lighting systems generate heat, which the refrigeration system needs to remove. In addition, lower temperatures reduce the efficacy of some lighting systems. Therefore, more power is required to generate the desired illumination, which in turn increases the load on the refrigeration system.


Lighting Technology Comparison

Innovative-Cold-Storage-San-Diego-4.jpg
In contrast to HID lighting options, LED lighting actually “thrives” in cold environments. Photo courtesy of BetaLED.
LED luminaires can provide significant advantages over fluorescent and high intensity discharge (HID) solutions in cold storage environments. Each conventional lighting technology creates performance compromises when performing in a refrigerated environment. Fluorescent lighting systems create heat and typically lose a substantial amount of light output in cold temperature environments. The heat created by the lighting system needs to be removed and requires additional refrigeration capacity and power consumption. HID technology such as metal halide creates a more substantial amount of heat, requiring even more refrigeration capacity and power consumption. LED luminaires, however, provide benefits when used in cold storage environments; they create minimal heat, which translates to very low refrigeration loads, greatly reduced lumen depreciation and increased light output.

LED technology combined with cold storage applications offer numerous and significant advantages, including:

* Thermal load reduction

* Instant-on capabilities

* Energy efficiency and low-maintenance benefits


Innovative-Cold-Storage-high-res.jpg
As the number of lighting options grows, it becomes even more important to make the best pairing of lighting and facility type. Photo courtesy of BetaLED.
LEDs at Work: Innovative Cold Storage Enterprises

When it was time for a San Diego, Calif.-based cold-storage company to expand, the owners decided to seek LEED Gold certification. Among the ways they decided to save energy inside this new refrigerated storage warehouse was to install LED lighting.

Officials with Innovative Cold Storage Enterprises, Inc. (ICE) were initially going to use 321 traditional HID lights that consumed approximately 465 system Watts each. Instead, they opted for LED luminaires, which include 230 LED lights at 86 system Watts each and another 49 LED lights at 321 system Watts each.

The warehouse lighting consumed 76 percent less energy using LED luminaires instead of the originally planned HID lights. Additionally, the LED lights provide an estimated 150,000 maintenance-free hours of operation in the minus 20 degree Celsius refrigerated warehouse, with lumen maintenance of greater than 70 percent. The longer service life is particularly useful in this application, where replacing lights would otherwise be laborious and expensive because of the 60-foot ceilings.

“Utilizing the (BetaLED) LED lights was a final touch to an already phenomenal project concerning energy savings. We sought to pursue energy efficiency in every facet, as well as cutting edge technology, which is clearly demonstrated in the application of these industrial LEDs,” said Phoebe Hamann, green building specialist, LEED AP, for Hamman Construction, which handled the warehouse project.

In all, the various energy-saving steps taken during construction mean the 132,000-square-foot warehouse costs half as much to operate as the old ICE facility, yet it can hold four times more product.


1. Asmus, Peter (Sunday, September 1, 2002) California Cold Storage Companies Cutting Cooling Costs. Frozen Food Age.


Sidebar: About the LED lighting installation

>> A total of 49 (321 Watt) THE EDGE LED canopy lights were used for freezer staging and the dock area. The freezer aisles feature 230 (86 Watt) THE EDGE LED parking structure lights.

>> The BetaLED total system consumes 76 percent less energy than the originally designed HID system. BetaLED luminaires provide over 150,000 maintenance-free hours in the minus 20 degree Celsius refrigerated warehouse.

>> With the help of THE EDGE fixtures, the ICE II freezer warehouse uses 62 percent less electricity than standard cold storage facilities.

Friday, July 9, 2010

Guide to LED Retrofit

LED lighting retrofits can offer businesses two key benefits: some fixtures can deliver up to an 85 percent energy savings and the life span of LEDs average about 50,000 hours, reports Retrofit Magazine. But before making a decision on an energy efficient lighting retrofit, businesses first have to evaluate their current lighting layout and future requirements.

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) says seven percent of all energy consumed in the U.S. is for lighting, which is why the Obama Administration is setting energy conservation standards for certain types of fluorescent lamps and incandescent reflector lamps, and is investing $346 million in energy-efficient building technologies.

Before businesses make the investment to retrofit or replace their lighting, they need to consider several factors including the condition and voltage of the facility’s existing wiring and circuitry because certain LED fixtures may not be compatible with the voltage rating, and control preferences such as for dimming and/or motion control, according to the article.

Other issues include downtime for the installation, how much energy savings the company expects from the LED retrofit, manufacturers’ warranties, who will install the new lighting systems and whether it’s necessary to take before and after light-level and energy readings.

Businesses also need to call their local utility companies to check on rebates for energy-efficient lighting and/or tax deductions or credits.

Here are five tips for selecting LED systems and vendors based on Retrofit’s article.

– Understand the fixture manufacturer’s claims including the performance of the products, up-front equipment costs, ongoing energy and maintenance costs and after-sale support.

– Evaluate the quality of the LEDs by comparing the light output and efficiency to your benchmarking tests.

– Evaluate the performance of the LED lighting fixture with your benchmarking data and the manufacturer’s photometric reports.

– Verify the manufacturer’s claims for light and energy performance.

– Review the installation requirements for LED lighting fixtures and ensure that your new fixtures are compliant to the National Electric Code requirements for installation of light fixtures.
LED Lighting Retrofits
 
A good practice for businesses looking to reduce energy expenses is to consider an LED lighting retrofit. Lighting retrofits replace lighting with newer technology such as LED linear lighting to save on energy costs and maintenance costs. Many building experts recommend a lighting retrofit as the first step to reducing energy costs. Redbird LED is an Atlanta based manufacturer and designer of Premium LED lights at value price points. For more information please visit their LED Retrofit website or call ( 678) 733-2473

Hyatt Hotel Undergoes LED Retrofit

As reported in Environmental Leader

The Hyatt Regency Boston has managed to reduce its energy costs by 42 percent, from 12.3 million kWh to 7.1 million kWh, over the last decade, according to a report in Green Lodging News.

According to the report, the company invested $3 million in improvements to energy efficiency, equipment and infrastructure, while a local gas and electric utility company provided rebates to defray some of the initial costs.

The hotel recently won the Energy Star rating from the Environmental Protection Agency, putting it in the top quartile of comparable buildings in terms of efficiency, using 35 percent less energy and emitting 35 percent less carbon dioxide. The 498-room hotel is owned by owned by Chesapeake Lodging Trust though managed by Hyatt.

Much of the efficiency savings were driven by the hotel’s decision to retrofit lighting- replacing  incandescent bulbs with LED Lights. According to the report, the hotel replaced 1,000 T-12 bulbs with T-8s. Some fixtures were able to reduce their wattage from 50 watts to 3. The hotel also installed motion detector light switches in some areas.

The hotel also installed CO2 detectors, which helps the building to optimize its HVAC system. By knowing when CO2 levels are getting high, building management can vent outside air only when needed, increasing energy efficiency.

It is also moving to a passive environmental management system for its rooms, allowing HVAC systems to shut off automatically when the room is unoccupied, rather than relying on decisions from the front desk or room occupant.

LED Lighting Retrofits
 
A good practice for businesses looking to reduce energy expenses is to consider an LED lighting retrofit. Lighting retrofits replace lighting with newer technology such as LED linear lighting to save on energy costs and maintenance costs. Many building experts recommend a lighting retrofit as the first step to reducing energy costs. Redbird LED is an Atlanta based manufacturer and designer of Premium LED lights at value price points. For more information please visit their LED Retrofit website or call ( 678) 733-2473

Maine Program Provides Funding for LED Retrofits and Other Energy Programs

As reported on www.environmentalleader.com

Businesses in Maine can apply for a rebate under Efficiency Maine's Prescriptive Incentives program for their energy-efficient retrofits, which in some cases have saved businesses up to 30 percent per month in electricity costs, reports Seacoastonline.com.

Case-in-point: Dan Corcoran, owner of Jackson’s True Value Hardware and Marine says more than one half the cost of installing its energy-efficient lighting was paid for by the Maine Public Utilities Commission under its Efficiency Maine program, and electricity costs have been cut by about 30 percent per month.

The program covers energy efficient lighting, HVAC equipment, motors and motor drives, commercial refrigeration and agricultural equipment. Businesses can apply for up to $300,000 in incentives in a single calendar year.

In 2009, Efficiency Maine helped complete nearly a thousand commercial projects that will save nearly $50 million a year in electric bills.

As an example, a project at Pineland Farms in New Gloucester, which completed a 200 street LED lighting retrofit is expected to save the college $30,000 annually in energy costs.

Michael Stoddard, executive director of Efficiency Maine, said in the article that 60 percent of Efficiency Maine’s $13 million annual budget is used for business programs and 40 percent for residential programs. The program is funded by a “modest surcharge” added to customers’ electric bills.

Efficiency Maine is proposing an increase to $21 million for the upcoming fiscal year.

In addition, Corcoran told Seacoastonline.com that his business has reduced its carbon footprint by more than 18,000 pounds per year, while reducing sulfur oxide, nitrogen oxide and mercury contamination and avoiding more than four tons of coal from being burned each year, according to information supplied to him by Efficiency Maine.

http://www.environmentalleader.com/2010/07/07/maine-efficiency-program-can-save-businesses-up-to-30-on-lighting-costs/



LED Lighting Retrofits
 
A good practice for businesses looking to reduce energy expenses is to consider an LED lighting retrofit. Lighting retrofits replace lighting with newer technology such as LED linear lighting to save on energy costs and maintenance costs. Many building experts recommend a lighting retrofit as the first step to reducing energy costs. Redbird LED is an Atlanta based manufacturer and designer of Premium LED lights at value price points. For more information please visit their LED Retrofit website or call ( 678) 733-2473

Universities Focus On Green Facilities and Educational Programs

As reported in USA Today

From tours of energy-efficient buildings to discussions about recycling rates and solar panels, universities and colleges across the country are increasingly putting on the green to attract students who are serious about environmental issues.

The trend is growing at schools large and small, public and private, says Mark Orlowski, founder and executive director of the Massachusetts-based Sustainable Endowments Institute. The non-profit research organization focuses on issues such as recycling, energy efficiency, food sourcing and investment priorities in higher education.

"The schools are seeing it as a way of attracting the best students possible," Orlowski says.

In 2009, the institute's survey, the College Sustainability Report Card, found 27% of colleges and universities were incorporating a sustainability message during the admissions and student orientation processes. The 2010 report card shows that number has increased to 69%,Orlowski says.

Green Mountain College in Poultney,Vt., has long incorporated an environmental focus in its recruiting efforts, says Sandra Bartholomew, the college's dean of Enrollment Management. Bartholomew says she and her staff have seen other universities jump on the bandwagon.

"It's a really popular trend. But is it all talk or is it the walk?" she says. "What we're going after are people who embrace the values of honoring the planet."

At American University in Washington, D.C., prospective students are taken through the school's arboretum and green-certified buildings, says admissions director Greg Grauman. He says the university uses social media and the Internet to help cut down on printed paper communications with current and prospective students.

Colorado State University in Fort Collins. has dubbed itself "The Green University" — its colors are green and gold — and is building what, according to the Denver-based Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education, will be the largest solar power plant on a university campus. "We make efforts to show them the latest building innovations — ones that are LEED (Leadership in Energy & Environmental Design) certified or have solar panels," says Jim Rawlins, CSU's executive director of admissions.

CSU is also in the process of buying battery-powered vans to shuttle prospective students and their parents around campus, he says.

Hailey Broderick, 27, a second-year MBA student at the University of Colorado in Boulder, says she considered colleges in Boston and on the West Coast, but selected the university's Leeds School of Business in part because the program incorporates sustainability — from energy-efficient buildings to case studies on solar companies — into everything it does.

"I wouldn't have chosen Leeds if they were just a traditional business school," she says. "The sustainability piece was big for me."

Contributing: Hughes reports for The (Fort Collins) Coloradoan

LED Lighting Retrofits
 
A good practice for businesses looking to reduce energy expenses is to consider an LED lighting retrofit. Lighting retrofits replace lighting with newer technology such as LED linear lighting to save on energy costs and maintenance costs. Many building experts recommend a lighting retrofit as the first step to reducing energy costs. Redbird LED is an Atlanta based manufacturer and designer of Premium LED lights at value price points. For more information please visit their LED Retrofit website or call ( 678) 733-2473

Thursday, July 8, 2010

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Case Western Reserve University has begun to embrace the energy savings that LED lighting can provide, although on a far smaller scale than what the city of Cleveland proposes.

The university's facilities services director and an engineering professor testified about the benefits of the high-tech lights Wednesday before a City Council committee that is considering LED-related legislation proposed by Mayor Frank Jackson.
22
0
0Share

Jackson wants council to approve a 10-year contract to buy millions of dollars in LED street and traffic lights, tube lights and light bulbs from one company in exchange for the company building a manufacturing and research facility in the city and creating at least 350 jobs.

Jackson asked council on May 31 to shelve an ordinance that would have given the contract to a Chinese company. He said he had "tainted" the process by announcing the deal with Sunpu-Opto Semiconductor Ltd. while Cleveland Public Power officials were still gathering proposals from competing lighting companies.

His administration submitted a similar ordinance a week later that calls for finding a LED supplier through competitive bidding.

At the Wednesday committee hearing, CWRU officials reported that the university has replaced various types of lighting with LEDs in about 250 fixtures, including lights for elevators, stairwells, parking lots and wall sconces.

The energy savings amounts to nearly $19,000 a year, said Eugene Matthews, the school's facilities services director.

Matthews said no one has complained about the LED lights, but acknowledged that LEDs have limits.

"There's no single technology that can be applied across the board," he said.

Matthews and Frank Merat, the engineering professor, agreed that replacing fluorescent tube lights with LEDs is not yet cost efficient. The head of solid-state lighting research for the U.S. Department of Energy has issued a similar opinion.

Administration officials said Wednesday that the proposed legislation does not obligate the city to buy fluorescent tube replacements if they do not make economic sense.

Officials have not specified how many LED lights the city will buy if City Council approves the ordinance, but the number would be considerable.

When pushing for the deal with Sunpu-Opto, administration officials planned to initially buy 10,000 street lights, 100,000 fluorescent tube replacements for city buildings and 150,000 light bulbs to distribute to residents.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: mgillispie@plaind.com, 216-999-4738

Thursday, July 1, 2010

BJ Planning LED Retrofit in 68 Stores

As reported on Environmental Leader website:

BJ's Wholesale Club, a food warehouse club, will install a new LED refrigerated case lighting system in 68 of its locations this year, according to a company press release.

The new system was designed as the result of a partnership between BJ’s and International Light Technologies (ILT) to develop a new LED  lighting system ideally suited to BJ’s environment to replace the company’s existing fluorescent fixtures with more environmentally-friendly and cost-effective solutions. The LED lighting system uses green technology to reduce energy consumption and maintenance requirements while avoiding the hazardous waste issues associated with fluorescent lighting.

The new LED Lighting system will help reduce BJ’s carbon footprint while avoiding mercury disposal issues. The new LED lights are also more durable than the previous fluorescent bulbs and less likely to break during installation.


Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Markets recently undertook a similar LED lighting retrofit of its refrigerated case systems, while PowerSecure International announced two new products specifically designed at that niche.

LED Lighting Retrofits
 
A good practice for businesses looking to reduce energy expenses is to consider an LED lighting retrofit. Lighting retrofits replace lighting with newer technology such as LED linear lighting to save on energy costs and maintenance costs. Many building experts recommend a lighting retrofit as the first step to reducing energy costs. Redbird LED is an Atlanta based manufacturer and designer of Premium LED lights at value price points. For more information please visit their LED Retrofit website or call ( 678) 733-2473

VC Sees Future in LED Lighting

Venture capitalists invested $100 million in 14 LED lighting companies in the first quarter of 2010, up from $14 million in the same quarter a year ago, according to Cleantech Group, reports Reuters.


Venture capitalists invested $100 million in 14 LED lighting companies in the first quarter of 2010, up from $14 million in the same quarter a year ago, according to Cleantech Group, reports Reuters.

Leading the way is Silicon Valley, the U.S. technology capital. Alan Salzman, chief executive of Silicon Valley-based venture fund VantagePoint Venture Partners told Reuters that his company has $4.5 billion in committed capital in startups across different sectors, but lighting is the largest sector in its portfolio.

Investors are betting that LEDs will take hold with their long life and high energy efficiency benefits, consuming about 20 percent of the energy used by incandescents, despite their higher price tag, report Reuters.

The key barrier to the technology’s adoption has been pricing. Industry experts told Reuters that LED lighting needs to cost under $10 for the market to take off.

Investors expect that the cost will fall as LED start-ups reach scale and the technology advances. As an example, cited by Reuters, start-up Lemnis Lighting initially priced its LED bulbs at about $50 six months ago, which now cost $25. The company expects pricing will fall below $10 in the first half of 2011.

Pike Research expects LEDs will account for nearly half of the $4.4 billion U.S. market for lamps in the commercial, industrial and outdoor stationary sectors by 2020.

Retail giants like Wal-Mart and restaurant chains such as Starbucks, Red Robin and Yum! Brands are already making the switch to LED lighting to reduce energy costs.

LED Lighting Retrofits
 
A good practice for businesses looking to reduce energy expenses is to consider an LED lighting retrofit. Lighting retrofits replace lighting with newer technology such as LED linear lighting to save on energy costs and maintenance costs. Many building experts recommend a lighting retrofit as the first step to reducing energy costs. Redbird LED is an Atlanta based manufacturer and designer of Premium LED lights at value price points. For more information please visit their LED Retrofit website or call ( 678) 733-2473

Sony Lighting Retrofit

Sony Supply Chain Solutions Singapore (SSCSS) has cut energy use in its warehouse by more than 50 percent by installing energy-efficient and dimmable lighting. It also reduced the number of fixtures required in the warehouse and significantly improved lighting levels.

The high bay lighting system consists of Echelon’s LonWorks control networking technology and ROMlight’s energy-efficient, individually dimmable lights.

The lighting retrofit was installed by Fluematic Engineering Services, which replaced the existing 210 400-W metal halide lighting fixtures with 147 400-W metal halide fixtures with acrylic reflectors. Each fixture includes Echelon LonWorks power line-based networking technology to enable remote control and dimming at both the individual fixture and system level.

Echelon’s i.LON energy manager provides system level functionality such as scheduling, and can act as a conduit to other building systems and software applications.

Fluematic Engineering Services expects SSCSS to get a return on its investment in three years.

LED Lighting Retrofits
 
A good practice for businesses looking to reduce energy expenses is to consider an LED lighting retrofit. Lighting retrofits replace lighting with newer technology such as LED linear lighting to save on energy costs and maintenance costs. Many building experts recommend a lighting retrofit as the first step to reducing energy costs. Redbird LED is an Atlanta based manufacturer and designer of Premium LED lights at value price points. For more information please visit their LED Retrofit website or call ( 678) 733-2473

Cleveland Still Studying LED Retrofit Program

While Mayor Frank Jackson's second effort to tie the purchase of millions of dollars' worth of LED lights to job creation requires competitive bidding, some council members remain skeptical that it's a good deal for the city.

A joint council committee met Wednesday for the first of several hearings on the LED issue. It quickly became evident during the meeting that council opponents of the initial LED legislation are not ready to embrace this latest try.

Those members continued to question whether some of the LED lights the city proposes to buy would save on energy costs, wondered about the wisdom of giving one company a 10-year contract and were unsure if the effort at creating a new economic model for city purchasing is viable. Finally, there continues to be mistrust of the administration.

"This is an issue of integrity that lingers from the previous experience of trying to get the ordinance passed," said Councilman Jeff Johnson.

Darnell Brown, Jackson's chief operating officer, said the new ordinance gives companies the chance to prove claims that they can deliver both LED lights and jobs. The ordinance, which must be approved by council, requires the winning bidder to create at least 350 jobs and build a manufacturing plant and research facility in Cleveland.

"These are exactly the types of jobs that have been drying up in Cleveland," Brown said. "This is about helping Clevelanders compete locally in regards to an advanced energy product."

Jackson proposed earlier this year to give a Chinese company an exclusive contract to provide LED street lights, traffic lights, light bulbs and fluorescent tube replacements in exchange for the company building its North American headquarters in Cleveland and creating 350 jobs.

The mayor pulled the plug on the deal before a planned May 31 council vote. Jackson said he had tainted the process when he announced a deal with Sunpu-Opto Semiconductor Ltd. during his State of the City speech in March even though Cleveland Public Power officials were still gathering proposals from competing lighting companies.

Jackson also acknowledged there were questions about the role of a middleman who had introduced city officials to Sunpu representatives last August. That middleman later became president of the company's proposed U.S. subsidiary.

The new legislation is similar to the Sunpu-Opto piece except that instead of hand-picking the company, the contract will be bid.

Administration officials say the contract provides the city with guarantees and protections should the winning bidder fail to create the required number of jobs or deliver quality LED lights the city needs.

Redbird LED Offers LED Retrofits at Lower Pricing

The energy savings numbers of using LED lights has been obvious for a number of years but the initial costs have hindered the growth of the LED Retrofit market. That has changed with a new line up of LED Tube Lights from Atlanta based Redbird LED. They have carefully designed and manufactured a superior quality lights that is priced lower than most competitors. For more information please visit their LED Retrofit website.