LED NEWS
Clinton Hails L.A.'s shift to LED Street
Lights

NBCLosAngeles.com
updated 3:17 p.m.
ET, Wed., Feb. 18,
2009
LOS ANGELES -- Calling it a "great day in Los Angeles," former
President Bill Clinton joined Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa on
Monday in unveiling what is billed as the largest effort by a
U.S. city to reduce pollution by retrofitting incandescent
street lights with more efficient LEDs or light emitting
diodes.
Over a five-year period starting in July, the city will
retrofit 140,000 of its residential street lights with LEDs,
officials said during City Hall news conference. The project is
expected to reduce carbon emissions by 40,500 tons and save $10
million annually.
"This is the best place in the world -- in the U.S. at least --
to lead this," Clinton said, citing the city's ongoing
environmental efforts. "This is like taking 6,000 cars off the
road.
"If every major city followed your lead, we could eliminate 2
1/2 coal-fired power plants."
Villaraigosa hailed the effort, saying it would help make Los
Angeles the "cleanest, greenest big city in the U.S. We are
building a bridge to a sustainable future."
As the two men spoke, they were flanked by video displays
showing workers installing the LEDs as part of a pilot project
in the San Fernando Valley.
Nearby charts illustrated how the city's energy usage would
fall from 197 million kilowatt-hours to 132 million
kilowatt-hours over the next 10 years.
Clinton said money from the $787 billion federal stimulus
package President Obama plans to sign Tuesday includes funds
for environmental efforts similar to the Los Angeles street
light program.
"If we help you to live green," Clinton said, there could be a
time when "every major city could be without a landfill."
The ex-president began the Clinton Climate Initiative in August
2006 to help fight global warming. It is a partnership with the
C40 Large Cities Climate Leadership Group, an association of
large cities worldwide, including Los Angeles, that have
pledged to accelerate their effort to reduce greenhouse
emissions.
"The solution to the climate crisis isn't far off in the future
-- it's in the buildings we inhabit, our civic infrastructure
and the way we organize our lives," Clinton said at the 2007
Greenbuild International Conference in Chicago.
Clinton's visit to Los Angeles comes a day after the C-SPAN
2009 Historians Presidential Leadership Survey ranked him 15th
among the 42 men who have served as president, up six spots
from a year ago. Clinton was ranked third in economic
management and fourth in pursing equal justice for all, but
37th in moral authority.
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