Mercury Falling with the Rise of CFL Bulbs
December 28th, 2007 by Jim Gunshinan
Broke Your CFL? Don’t Panic!
The typical dose of mercury in a CFL is about the sizeof a pen tip
(circled in red), and these doses have been getting smaller and smaller.
(Photo provided by EPA.)
Australia has already begun to phase out the incandescent light bulb,
and the energy legislation recently signed by President Bush has
begun that process in the United States. Every time I turnaround,
it seems, someone is handing me a brand new
compact fluorescent light (CFL) to advance the cause of energy
efficiency and help save the planet. CFLs are becoming ubiquitous
in households all over California. We taught them in the pages of
Home Energy all the time. And that’s a goodthing, right?
Brandy Bridges, of Ellsworth, Maine may not think so. A cleaning
company quoted her a price of $2,000 to clean her house after
she broke a CFL.The benefits of CFLs are many–they use about75%
less energy than incandescents and last up to ten times longer.
Replacing a 75W incandescent with an 18W CFL will save you about $46
in electricity costs over the life of the bulb, and thatis at current
electricity prices, which no doubt will go up, making today’s CFLs an
even better deal. Energy Star CFLs (www.energystar.gov/cfls) won’t
flicker, give warmer light, and there area variety of them, from
the ubiquitous A-line bulb, to candelabras.
But, and it’s a big but, CFLs won’t give light without mercury.
The average CFL on the shelf at your local hardware store has about
4 mg of mercury in it. Mercury vapor is harmful to humans,and there
is enough mercury accumulated in some of the fish we eat
to make this Californian think twice about ordering salmon for dinner.
Thankfully, there are ways to clean up a broken CFL thatdon’t involve
an overly frightened and/or greedy cleaning company
(www.epa.gov/CFLcleanup), and recycling centers are available, if not
yet ubiquitous (that word again!) (www.lamprecycle.org).
Even if the worst happens and you break a CFL bulb, the EPA estimates
that at most only 6.8% of the 4 mg of mercury will be released, or about
0.27 mg, since most of it is in the glass, electrodes, and in the phosphor
coating on the inside of the glass. Incinerating a bulb willpotentially
release more mercury vapor, if there are no pollution controls on the incinerator.
But even if the CFL released all of it’s mercury–according to Richard Benware,
a graduate student at Cornell who researched CFLs last summer for EPA’s
Energy Star program–it would still be a better choice than an incandescent,
because over its lifetime, the 15W CFL will have preventedthe release of 5.67 mg
of mercury from an average power plant.
Of course, recycling is best, and that is still a problem. Alan Meier,
Home Energy’s senior executive editor, admits to turning
part of his garage into a “temporary hazardous waste holding facility” to
hold his family’s used CFLs, since the nearest CFL recycling center is
13 miles away from his home in Berkeley, through “one of the worst traffic
jams in the United States.” There is help in finding those recycling centers,
near and far (www.earth911.org).
But we need to put the same effort used in making CFLs ubiquitous into making
disposing of them in a clean safe manner just as ubiquitously easy.
You know what I mean.
Tags: cfls, energy efficiency, lighting, mercury
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