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Lighting for Tomorrow Connected Lighting and the Integrated Home Eileen Eaton Senior Program Manager New Orleans, LA September 19, 2018

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Page 1: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

Lighting for Tomorrow

Connected Lighting and the

Integrated Home

Eileen Eaton

Senior Program Manager

New Orleans, LA

September 19, 2018

Page 2: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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2002

2006

2010

2017

2018

LFT LaunchAimed at encouraging

the uptake of energy

efficient light fixtures

through better design

Shift to LEDsSupporting a shift to

even more efficient

technology, emphasis

on design and

engineering

Lighting Controls

and OLEDsWorking to ensure

compatibility and

advances in efficiency

Connected

LightingSeeking insights on

product offerings,

interoperability with

other systems, and the

customer experience

Strategic Vision

for the FutureHow might the LFT

platform be leveraged

going forward?

Lighting for Tomorrow History

Page 3: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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Stakeholder

workshop on

connected

lighting

Need to Reassess the LFT Model

Due to our collective success…

There is reduced

potential savings

from illumination

Residential lighting

program budgets

are diminishing

LFT is having less

of an impact in the

market

Sponsors and

industry highly value

the LFT platform and

would like to see it

continue

There isn’t

sufficient funding

available for a

competition model

Connected lighting is

emerging and the role

of lighting in the home

is evolving

Page 4: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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Sponsors Stakeholder Attendees

2018 Workshop Participants

Page 5: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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2018 Connected Lighting Workshop

Met with key industry stakeholders to develop a

collective understanding of connected lighting and the

integrated home

• Explored lighting technology and residential connected market

trends

• Identified new product functions or services beyond lighting

(sensing, processing, networking) and their implications

• Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value

proposition and adoption barriers of connected lighting

Assessed opportunities to overcome adoption barriers

and how to best leverage the LFT platform

Page 6: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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Workshop Whitepaper – Coming Soon!

Documenting discussions and

key takeaways from workshop

– Critical perspectives on the

connected lighting market,

potential benefits, and

lighting’s role in the

integrated home

– Considerations to inform

future program and product

design

– Proposal to expand the LFT

competition in 2019

Topic of today’s Residential

Lighting breakout session!

Page 7: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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Eileen Eaton

Senior Program Manager

617-337-9263

[email protected]

Catie Dimas

Program Manager

617-337-9283

[email protected]

Page 8: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

The NEW New

Construction Initiative

Alice Rosenberg

September 19, 2018

New Orleans, LA

CEE Summer Program Meeting

Page 9: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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Initiative Objectives

Establish national coordination and consistency

Drive robust quality assurance measures

Create a trajectory for market transformation

Engage with key industry stakeholders

Incorporate opportunities associated with connectivity

Collaborate and align with federal voluntary programs

Help inform future codes through long-term pathway

Page 10: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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Specification Structure

Performance-based tiers that reference the

ANSI/RESNET/ICC 301-2014 Energy Rating Index

Minimum quality assurance for all tiers

Optional components for inclusion:• Nonenergy Benefits / Enhanced Building Science

• Renewables

• Connectivity

• Minimum Prescriptive Requirements

Page 11: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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Market Transformation and Impacts

Performance-based tiers facilitate:

• Industry activity and competition

• Product and system advancement

• Long-term pathway for stakeholders

Optional connectivity criteria outlines:

• Requirements for installed equipment

• Minimum infrastructural components

Page 12: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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Alice RosenbergSenior Program Manager

617-337-9287

[email protected]

Contact and Additional Resources

www.cee1.org/content/cee-program-resources

Page 13: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

Connected Residential

Appliance Subcommittee

Expanding Engagement Opportunities with

Industry Stakeholders

Catie Dimas

Program Manager

September 19, 2018

New Orleans, LA

Page 14: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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Why

Appliances?

381

724

CEE specifications

Bring clarity to a rapidly

evolving space

Relay future program

needs

Uncover opportunities for

grid and customer benefit

(e.g. load shifting,

aggregate savings)

Optional connected criteria (2)

In development (1)

Future (2)

Page 15: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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Piloting a New Approach

VS

Traditional Direct

Page 16: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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Taking a Deeper Dive

Value

Propositions

& Business

Models Product

Capabilities

Energy

Savings &

Energy

Management

Use Cases

Program

Design

Page 17: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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Contacts

Eileen Eaton

Senior Program Manager

617-337-9263

[email protected]

Catie Dimas

Program Manager

617-337-9283

[email protected]

Page 18: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

High Efficiency Commercial Air

Conditioning and Heat Pumps

Bjorn Jensen

Program Manager

September 19, 2018

New Orleans, LA

Page 19: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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Market ContextUnitary AC and HP Equipment

≈ 50 billion ft2

of commercial building

floor space

Or >50%

an estimated

2.1 quads

of primary energy

Or ~60%

Page 20: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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CEE High Efficiency Commercial AC and Heat

Pumps (HECAC) InitiativeCEE Specification Comparison with ENERGY STAR® and Federal Standards

(unitary AC ≥65,000 and <135,00 Btu/h)

*IEER for the federal standard and ENERGY STAR from 2018 forward, CEE

Advanced Tier (Tier 3) introduced in 2016, and proposed 2019 CEE tiers

New CEE tier

levels for

2019*

*

Page 21: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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Scope: Air-cooled Unitary AC and HP ≥65k Btu/h

Summary of Revisions

Tier Changes

1

• Adopt current Tier 2 criteria except for:o AC ≥240k Btu/h, adopt Tier 2 IEER only

o HP ≥135k, increase IEER to 10% above

baseline; COP at 47F by 0.1

2

• Increase IEER criteria for AC to align with

planned 2023 federal minimum

• Current Tier 2 for HPs ≥65k and <135kBtu/h

becomes Tier 1

Advanced • Increase IEER criteria for AC ≥240k and

<760k Btu/h to 10% above revised Tier 2

Page 22: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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CEE Tiers Program Opportunity

Estimated savings vary by sizeGraph above shows CEE tiers’ product

availability based on products listed in

AHRI Directory in 2018. Varies by size.

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

Tier 1 Tier 2 AdvancedTier

kWh Savings Relative to 2018 Fed. Min.

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

40%

Tier 1 Tier 2 AdvancedTier

Top % of

Models

CEE Tiers Recognize Top Peforming Products

Page 23: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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Contact

Bjorn Jensen

Program Manager

617-337-9280

[email protected]

Page 24: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

CEE Commercial Lighting

Systems Initiative Update

Ted Jones

C&I Sector Lead

September 19, 2018

Page 25: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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Scope of the Commercial Lighting

Initiative

Rising baselines

New technologies

Fixtures

Systems

Lamps

Page 26: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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January 2018 new federal minimum

standards for General Service Fluorescent

Lamps took effect

Growing TLED market share, accounting for 23% of

fluorescent lamp shipments in Q4 2017

Fluorescent T8s shipments on a 3 year trend, declining

19.8% from 2016 to 2017

Majority of lamp shipments = Fluorescent T8s

T8 Lamp Market Trends

Page 27: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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CEE T8 Replacement Lamp Specification

Effective Aug 30, 2018

Separate specifications for T8

fluorescents and TLEDs

Reduced Wattage

Fluorescent T8s

• Higher efficacy (lm/W) and

lamp life for Tier 0 and Tier

1, respectively

UL Type A TLEDs

• Establishing Tier 1 as a

mass market tier, 10%

higher

• Added a Tier 2 to highlight

lamps with higher luminous

efficacy and increased beam

width to address glare

Reduced Wattage Fluorescent T8s

Tier Tier 0 Tier 1

Wattage ≤ 28W ≤ 28W

Efficacy (lm/W) ≥ 92.4 ≥ 96

Lamp Life ≥ 24,000 ≥ 36,000

Luminous Flux

Maintenance

≥ 94 percent

CRI ≥ 80

Other Required

Information

Nominal Wattage

Initial Lumen Output

Recommendation for Dimming

UL Type A TLEDs

Tier Tier 1 Tier 2

Efficacy (lm/W) ≥ 110 ≥ 125

Beam Angle ≥ 120° ≥ 160°

Luminous Flux

Maintenance

L70 of ≥ 50,000 hrs

CRI ≥ 80

Other Required

Information

Nominal Wattage

Initial Lumen Output

Recommendation for Dimming

Ballasts Evaluated for Compatibility

Beam Angle & Aperture Finish

Page 28: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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Updating the CEE T8 Replacement Lamp

Qualified Products List (QPL)

Page 29: Connected Lighting and the · 19/9/2018  · (sensing, processing, networking) and their implications • Discussed how various stakeholders are addressing the value proposition and

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Commercial Lighting and Whole Building

Breakout Session

Connecting the Pieces: Understanding the

Integration of Commercial Lighting and

Energy Management Systems

• Today at 3:30pm

• Location: Acadian I & II