Solar Street Lights a Positive Change - Beyond Solar

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Solar Street Lights: A Positive Change

Have you ever pondered over the amount of power consumed by street lights? Let’s start small with a table lamp. Your table lamp will consume 7 Watts worth of energy to help you work late at night. Furthermore, your average tube light to brighten up your room uses 55 Watts per hour. However, you have limited use of these lights, and restrict its power supply to limited hours every day. So, you make sure that you’re maintaining your electricity power bill every month. Let’s say we go higher than a table lamp and a tube light; we move on to a street lamp. Now here’s where the power consumption gets higher. The power consumption depends on where they are used, from residential areas, town centers and main roads. Let’s explore the positive difference you can make by replacing traditional street lights with Solar-powered lighting.

How much power is consumed by street lights? There are different types of street lights out there, mainly solar LED street lights, fluorescent, metal halides, halogen, and high-pressure sodium lamps. Their operating costs and pricing altogether vary based on the equipment and power used. Here’s how you can understand the difference between an LED-lit street and a solar-lit street. Take for example, a Vista 100-Watt LED street light on a long stretch of a road. The light pole is 30 feet high, and the road is lit up for 12 hours every night. The average cost is 10 cents per kilowatt-hour ($0.10/kWh), which


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