United States
Environmental Protection
Agency
Air and Radiation
(ANR-445)
EPA/400/1-92/003
February 1992
Green Lights
Program

The First Year
                             Printed on Recycled Paper

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Program   Summary

   The Environmental Protection Agency's Green Lights Program was
officially launched on January 16,1991. The program's goal is to prevent
pollution by encouraging major U.S. institutions-businesses, govern-
ments, and other organizations-to use energy-efficient lighting. Be-
cause lighting is such a large consumer of electricity (about 25 percent of
the national total) and so wasteful (more than half the electricity used for
lighting is wasted by inefficient technology and design practices), the
Green Lights program offers a substantial opportunity to prevent pollu-
tion, and to do so at a profit. Lighting upgrades reduce electric bills and
maintenance costs and increase lighting quality; typically, investments
in energy-efficient lighting yield 20 to 30 percent rates of return (IRR)
per year.
   EPA promotes energy-efficient lighting by asking major institutions
to sign a Memorandum of Understanding  (MOU) with the Agency; in
this MOU, the signatory commits to install energy-efficient lighting in
90 percent of their space nationwide over a 5-year period, but only where
it is  profitable and where  lighting quality is maintained or improved.
EPA, in turn, offers program participants a portfolio of technical sup-
port  services to assist them in upgrading their buildings (see opposite
page). Sample MOUs are available upon request.
   Every kilowatt-hour of electricity not used prevents the emission of
1.5 pounds of carbon dioxide (the most important greenhouse gas), 5.8
grams of sulfur dioxide (a principal component of acid rain), and 2.5
grams of nitrogen oxides (precursor to both acid rain and smog), as well
as the pollution attendant upon mining and transporting power-plant
fuels and disposing of power-plant wastes.
   Energy-Efficient Lighting
   Prevents Pollution
   If everyone in the United States used
   profitable energy-efficient lighting, we
   would prevent the emission of 232 million
   tons of carbon dioxide, 1.7 million tons of sulfur
   dioxide, and 900,000 tons of nitrogen oxides.
    If energy-efficient lighting were used wherever profitable, the
nation's demand for electricity could be cut by more than 10 percent,
leading to 4 to 7 percent reductions in the emissions of carbon dioxide,
sulfur dioxide, and nitrogen oxides. In terms of carbon dioxide, energy-
efficient lighting offers the same pollution prevention opportunity as
taking 42 million cars off the road, the equivalent of one-third of
the U.S. fleet.

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EPA's  Commitments
  When EPA signs the Memorandum of
  Understanding, it agrees to provide
        Decision Support System - a state-of-
        the-art computer software program that
        allows Green Lights corporations to survey
        lighting systems in their facilities, assess
        their options, and select the best energy-
        efficient lighting upgrade.


        Training Workshops- programs,
        scheduled nationwide, that feature
        comprehensive training on the Decision
        Support System as well as lighting
        fundamentals, technology, project
        management, and Green Lights reporting.


        National Lighting Product
        Information Program- an independent
        lighting information program that
        provides an objective source of name-
        brand product information.


        Financing Registries- computer
        databases containing information on utility-
        sponsored financial assistance (e.g., auditing
        and technical support, lighting design
        services, free installation, rebates, and loans),
        energy-service company programs, and
        government grants and low-interest loans.


        Lighting Services Group- offers
        technical support, problem solving, and
        training for Green Lights participants
        installing energy-efficient lighting.


        Corporate Communications-
        advertising and marketing materials
        designed to recognize participants for their
        commitment to the program and to keep
        them informed.
        Ally Programs-individual programs
        designed for manufacturers, lighting
        management companies, and utilities to
        ensure that the lighting industry is involved
        in the program and aware of the
        environmental and economic benefits of
        Green Lights.
        Partner's

  Commitments


    When a Green Lights Partner
    signs the Memorandum of
    Understanding, it agrees to


   LJ Appoint an implementation
      manager to coordinate the
      program.

   LJ Survey the lighting in all of its
      U.S. facilities.

   I	I Consider a full range of lighting
      options to reduce energy use.

   I	I Upgrade 90 percent of the square
      footage of its facilities with the
      options that maximize energy
      savings to the extent that the
      upgrade is profitable and does
      not compromise lighting quality.
      There are no technology
      prescriptions.

   LJ Complete upgrades within 5
      years of signing the agreement.

   LJ Annually document the
      improvements it makes.

   I	I Design all new facilities to meet
      most current building efficiency
      standards.

   LJ Educate its employees about the
      benefits of energy-efficient
      lighting.
Whan companies sign the Croon Lights
Memorandum of Understanding, they
agree to upgrade their facilities with
energy-efficient lighting.  In return, the
B»A oonsiiu to provide a wide variety
of products and services designed to
make the job easier.  Over the program's
first year, the EPA has doivorod on every
one of its commitments.

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Why  Green   Lights?

    An often-asked question runs, "If energy-efficient lighting is so profitable,
and is so good for the environment, and delivers such superior lighting quality,
why does the Federal Government have to get involved?" The answer lies in the
haze between the ideals of economics and the reality of lighting today. Energy-
efficient lighting technologies, design practices, and maintenance systems
evolve over decades (if not centuries, if one considers the evolution from the
open fire to the candle to the oil lamp to Edison's light bulb), and market
penetration is often slow. The energy-efficient lighting technologies and design
principals available today were introduced 5 to 10 years ago but  have been
rarely used, typically capturing between 1 and 5 percent of the market. There are
six principal barriers, and Green Lights is attacking all of them:

•  Problem-Low Priority: Lighting is not a high priority for the vast majority
   of U.S. institutions. Typically the province of facility management, lighting
   is viewed as an overhead item. Because of this, most facilities are equipped
   with the lowest first-cost (rather than the lowest life-cycle cost) lighting
   systems, and profitable opportunities to upgrade the system are  ignored or
   passed over in favor of higher visibility projects. As a result, institutions pay
   needless overhead every year, reducing their own competitiveness and that
   of the country. And wasteful electricity use becomes a particularly senseless
   source of pollution.

Solution:  By signing the Green Lights Memorandum of Understanding, a
corporation's senior management makes clear that energy-efficient lighting is
now one of the business' high priorities. Authority is granted, budgets are
approved, procedures are streamlined, and staff are  assigned to make the
upgrades happen.

•  Problem-Information and Expertise:   Lighting is more complex than
   screwing in a light bulb, and the technologies and design  strategies are
   diverse and sometimes complex. To arrive at an energy-efficient lighting
   solution for a particular space requires accurate, comparable information
   about dozens of lighting technologies, design ability, and an investor's eye
   for long-term profit. Unfortunately, information is often scarce or suspect,
   design is frequently overlooked in favor of "cookie-cutter" solutions, and
   few institutions focus on lighting as a profit (rather than cost) center.

Solution: Green Lights has created the institutions and tools to help overcome
these barriers.
On November 4, 1991, Green Lights released its lighting Decision Support
System, the most sophisticated lighting survey and economic analysis software
available. The system allows a building surveyor to  rapidly  inventory the
current lighting system and choose from more than a thousand different
upgrade options to find the system that will be most energy-efficient. The
financial analysis is done on a life-cycle basis and allows the user to capture all
relevant streams of costs and benefits, including taxes and depreciation, opera-
tion and maintenance expenses, and the potential benefits of improved lighting
quality. The software is offered to Green Lights participants free of charge at a
series of training workshops held twice a month around the country.
A second institution created by Green Lights is the National Lighting Product
Information Program (NLPIP), based at Rensselaer Polytechnic  Institute's
Lighting Research Center. NLPIP produces name-brand reports on lighting
hardware, covering dozens of manufacturers and models. All data are gathered

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using standardized procedures and allow direct comparison between compet-
ing products for all relevant performance characteristics. These reports are sent
free of charge to all Green Lights participants.
Green Lights is also working with several lighting professional societies to build
a national certification program for lighting professionals. This will permit
individuals with true expertise in lighting to demonstrate their skills and
distinguish themselves in the marketplace.

•  Problem-Financing:  In existing buildings, the lighting system is usually
   working,  and any improvements are traditionally viewed as an expense,
   despite the fact that they are actually an investment that is frequently more
   profitable, and lower risk, than any other investment the company might
   make. Even where lighting investments are demonstrably more lucrative
   than other investments, companies will sometimes have different "hurdle
   rates" for different kinds of investments: a low one for core business
   investments, and a higher one (paradoxically) for lower-risk cost-cutting
   investments. Smaller businesses and  governmental agencies frequently
   have no capital to spare for any cost-cutting investment and accept paying
   a higher operating overhead year after year.
Solution: Green Lights has developed a unique registry of financing resources.
First offered in February 1991, it has since been updated twice.  The registry
provides detailed information on more than 200 utility programs that offer
lighting rebates and free installations to their customers.  It also provides a
directory of more than 75 companies that can finance lighting efficiency up-
grades using leasing, shared savings, guaranteed savings, and other financing
techniques. The registry is provided free of charge to all Green Lights partici-
pants.

•  Problem-Restricted Market:  Because energy-efficient lighting has cap-
   tured only a tiny fraction of the overall lighting market, unit prices have often
   been high compared with the "garden variety" products they replace. When
   new technology is introduced, R&D costs and new factories have to be
   amortized, and the unit marketing costs for low-volume products further
   raises the price. Distributors are often reluctant to reserve valuable shelf
   space for slower-moving products. Innovators are slow to introduce new
   technology. As a result, energy-efficient lighting hardware has remained
   expensive, further slowing its penetration in the marketplace.

Solution: Green Lights. The program is catalyzing a rapidly increasing demand
for energy-efficient lighting products, with visible impacts on shipment volumes
and prices.  New competitors are entering the market, bringing innovative
technologies and further price and service competition. Green Lights and other
lighting efficiency  programs are projected  to increase the market  share of
energy-efficient lighting products from its current  5 percent to around 40
percent by 1995.  Prices of some products have been already been falling (by as
much as 25 percent in the last 12 months) and are expected to continue declining
as shipment volumes increase.

•  Problem-Split incentives: There is often no incentive to upgrade lighting
   systems. For example, a typical lease in a master-metered building requires
   the tenant to pay a  fixed rent, which includes  a  pro-rata  share  of the
   building's utility charges.  If that tenant wanted to upgrade the lighting
   system and reduce their electricity consumption, the lease would need re-

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ABW
   negotiation to allow pass-through of the savings. In addition, without direct
   metering, it is difficult to validate the exact amount of savings due to that
   tenant.  Conversely, with all of the utility charges passed through to the
   tenants, the landlord rarely sees it in his interest to install more efficient
   lighting systems when the building is first built. Instead, the lowest first-cost
   system is chosen.

Solution:  Green  Lights has initiated a project to develop standard lease
language that will remove the split incentive barrier, and the program will
encourage participants to use the model language in lease negotiations. The
program is also working to accelerate the adoption of submetering by encouraging
Partners to submeter their lighting upgrades.

•  Problem-Market Fragmentation: Buyers and sellers of lighting equipment
   and services often have trouble communicating. Most lighting manufactur-
   ers produce and market only one kind of product: lamps, ballasts, fixtures,
   and so on. Lighting purchasers need systems composed of many different
   products and need "system thinking" from their vendors. Vendors, in turn,
   are frustrated by the low priority  assigned to lighting by most major
   businesses and by their lack of understanding of the importance of good
   lighting.

Solution: The Green Lights Allies programs. Green Lights Allies are members
of the lighting manufacturing and service industries as well as electric utilities,
who join Green Lights on terms very similar to those of the Green Lights
Partners. However, in addition to committing to upgrade their facilities, Green
Lights Allies also commit to  help EPA and the Green Lights Partners success-
fully implement the program. Allies have delivered on this commitment in a
variety of ways:  recruiting new Partners, providing data  to the National
Lighting Product Information Program, helping to design the Decision Support
System, and advertising their membership in and allegiance to the principals of
the Green Lights Program. While Green Lights does not endorse the products
or services of the Green Lights Allies, the existence of the program has enhanced
communication throughout the lighting industry on the subjects of energy
efficiency, environmental protection, and lighting quality.
         Program  Highlights

         Recruitment

            Green Lights is a voluntary program. As such, the program must
         persuade lighting users that energy-efficient lighting is good for the
         environment, good for their bottom line, and a good opportunity to
         work in cooperation with EPA.  The program office has used a variety of
         marketing tools to recruit new  members to Green Lights.
         •   Conferences: Green Lights  conducted three large marketing confer-
            ences in 1991 (Washington in January, Portland Oregon in May, and
            Atlanta in July), attended by representatives of 600 corporations.
         •   Direct Visits: Green Lights staff have visited dozens of corporate
            and governmental headquarters, a process that accelerated with the
            inauguration of a full-time travelling sales campaign in October
            1991.

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•  Telemarketing:  Starting in July 1991, the program office built a
   telemarketing system, complete with the latest telemarketing soft-
   ware, to assist in selling the program to the 8,000 contacts stored in
   the program's marketing database.
•  Mass Communication: Green Lights is increasingly using advertis-
   ing and news coverage to reach a broader audience. More than a
   hundred Green Lights news stories have appeared in dozens of
   media outlets, and Green Lights advertising (sponsored by the
   program office or by program participants) is increasingly visible in
   the popular, business, and trade press. Green Lights advertising has
   appeared in the  Portland Oregonian, the Atlanta Constitution and
   Journal, Atlanta magazine, BusinessWeek, and Discover.
   The typical organization takes approximately 4 months to decide to
join Green Lights, with some taking up to a year. The process starts with
an EPA presentation, a piece of direct mail, an article in a newspaper, or
an advertisement in a magazine.  Several rounds of visits, telephone
contact and technical support follow, sometimes including a lighting
survey of a major facility to validate the savings opportunities available
to the potential Partner. It is normal for several different groups within
the organization to get involved: facilities management, environmental
compliance, energy,  finance, strategic planning, public affairs, and so
on. Each department may require direct contact with EPA to ensure that
all of its questions and concerns are addressed.  The final step is the
signing of the Memorandum of Understanding by a senior officer and
the initiation of the lighting upgrade program.
Scorecard
                                           Green Lights
                                           Participants
   On January 31,1991, Green Lights had 40 participants. As of Febru-
ary 18,1992, 402 institutions had signed Memoranda of Understanding
with EPA to join Green Lights. This number includes 168 Corporate
Partners, 9 Government
Partners,  144  Manufac-
turer Allies, 48 Lighting
Management Company
Allies, and 27 Electric
Utility Allies. In addition,
6 trade and professional
organizations  have en-
dorsed the program. The
program participants col-
lectively  own or lease 2
billion square feet of fa-
cility space, about 2.5
percent of the national
total.  This is equivalent
to all of the leasable office
space of the metropolitan
areas of New York City,
Los Angeles, Chicago, San
Francisco, Washington,
D.C.,  Philadelphia, and
Dallas.
                           9
                           _a
                           "3
                           t
                           OL
400

350
300

250
200

150

100
 50
                                  Jan  Ftfa  Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug S*p Oct Nov Dec J«n
                                  1991                                      1992
                                                           Lighting
                                 I Partners  I   I Manufacturer  •[ Management  • yt'lr*Y
                                 1        I—I Allies       ™ Co. Allies    ™ Allies

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Implementation

   Green Lights participants have five years to complete their lighting
upgrades. The typical plan for most companies has been to use the first
year or two to  survey buildings, develop expertise, train staff, and
acquire budgets. The first two years also include, in most cases, some
lighting upgrades; this helps with the training process and allows staff
to develop procedures for budgeting, procurement, installation, con-
tracting, reporting, and so on. Years three and four will be the time of
major upgrades by Green Lights participants; several are planning
national procurements for firms that will supply upgrade materials and
installation labor for all of their facilities.
   Green Lights staff and contractors assist participants in implement-
ing the program. The program offers two-day training courses twice a
month across the country:
Washington, D.C.   Nov. 1991      Chicago          April 1992
Ashland, KY        Dec. 1991      Oklahoma City    April 1992
Los Angeles        Dec. 1991      Boston           April 1992
New York City      Jan. 1992      Raleigh, NC       May 1992
New Orleans       Jan. 1992      San Francisco     May 1992
Nashville          Feb.  1992      Boulder          June 1992
Washington, D.C.   Feb.  1992      New York City    June 1992
Tampa, FL         March 1992    Seattle           July 1992
Washington, D.C.   March 1992    Kansas City       July 1992

   The training courses  feature  an intensive introduction to energy-
efficient lighting, instruction on the use of the Decision Support System
software, and ideas on how to be an effective project manager.  Green
Lights staff  and contractors also have conducted more specialized
meetings at participants' buildings,  either to help perform a lighting
survey or to help the company  organize its resources to implement
Green Lights. The program also operates two hotlines: the Customer
Service Center answers general questions about the program and mails
out program materials (approximately 2000 envelopes per month), while
the Lighting Services Group operates a hotline for Partners with technical
questions. Participants also receive a monthly  newsletter, the Green
Lights Update. Finally, the Green Lights Electronic Bulletin Board will
come on-line on March 2,1992.


Implementation

Scorecard

   Because program participants report their progress on an anniversary basis, the
signatory "classes" of January and February 1991 recently reported their upgrade
status. Several non-anniversary participants also have submitted interim reports
on their progress to date. All told, as of February 23,1992,181 buildings were in the
officially-reported "upgrade pipeline," covering 77 million square feet of facility
space (equivalent to the office and warehouse space of the Baltimore metropolitan
area). Forty-nine buildings have been fully upgraded, with a typical reduction in
lighting electricity use of 40 to 70 percent. The table at right provides further details.

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           Green Lights
         Implementation
            Scorecard
         as of February 23, 1992
Number of companies reporting   40
Buildings
 surveyed
 trial installation
 partial upgrade
Number
  109
   7
   16
 complete upgrade 49
 Million Sq.Ft.
      46.3
       3.0
       6.7
      21.0
Percentage of reporting
participants' square footage     23%
in the "upgrade pipeline"

Typical lighting
electricity reductions        40-70%

Typical rate of return        30-60%
Kilowatt-hours avoided
by completed upgrades
(per year)
Pollution pre-
vention (per year)
from completed
upgrades

Cost of conserved
energy at com-
pleted upgrades
(range)
    C02
    S02
    NOV
         35.2 million
      dbs)
52.8 million
   449,692
   193,833
    1-3 cents per kWh

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Ally   Program  Highlights

•  Manufacturers Prolight, American Energy Management and Sylvania Lighting
   recruited Domino's Pizza, Brach Co., and Westin Hotels, respectively, as
   Partners. And, at least seven LMC Allies recruited one or more Partners-the
   biggest being the Melville Corporation, recruited by Mira Lighting and Electric
   Service.
•  Lamp and ballast manufacturers as well as Lighting Management Company
   Allies provided information for the publication Survey and Forecast of Marketplace
   Supply and Demand for Energy-Efficient Lighting Products.
•  Ballast manufacturers cooperated with the Lighting Research Center to produce
   the first NLPIP Specifier Report  on ballasts.  Reflector and power reducer
   manufacturers are now working on future Specifier Reports.
•  Several Lighting Management Company Allies provided case studies and gave
   comments on the Green Lights Lighting Upgrade Manual.
•  Manufacturers and Lighting Management Company Allies sit on the Decision
   Support System user advisory group. Allies beta-tested the system, and in
   September, 40 Allies came to a prescreening of the system to review the software
   and help develop a list of prices for the database.
•  Portland General Electric and EPA sponsored a Green Lights workshop in
   Portland, Oregon, in May. More than 300 participants representing 200 corpo-
   rations attended the marketing event. Twenty manufacturers exhibited their
   technology and services at the Green Lights conference in Atlanta in July,
   helping to make the event a big success.
•  Magnetek developed its own Green Lights brochure and launched its Green
   Zone program to promote energy-efficient lighting, targeting Green  Lights
   Partners.  Other companies  (e.g., Sylvania Lighting) developed  brochures
   promoting the environmental benefits of energy-efficient lighting, and Lithonia
   Lighting incorporated Green Lights into their LEEP (Lithonia Energy-Efficiency
   Program), using the Green Lights logo extensively and distributing Green
   Lights Light Briefs.
•  Fifteen LMC Allies advertised their participation in a Green Lights "Special
   Report" in theSeptember BuildingOperatingManagementMagazine. DlumElex
   promoted the Green Lights  program through its  "Business Spotlights" in
   national newspapers. And O&A Electric Cooperative featured a special Green
   Lights section in their summer marketing publication "Along Our Highlines."

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 Green   Lights  in  the  News

     "The voluntary program will seek to persuade chief executives that investments in more efficient
 lighting in offices, stores and factories will return bigger profits than any other use of the money, while
 providing better working conditions and good public relations."
   -  The New York Times,
      "EPA Urging Electricity Efficiency," Jan. 16, 1991

     "3M's commitment to Green Lights is expected to reduce energy consumption by 40 million
 kilowatt hours and air pollution by more than 80 million pounds.  3M also expects to save $2 million
 in operating costs as a result of installing new energy-efficient lighting at 3M facilities."
   -  Stemwinder, a newspaper for  Twin Cities area 3M employees,
         March 6, 1991
     "Green Lights aims to make companies feel like heroes by making an investment that cuts their
electricity use, lowers pollution and returns a quick, low-risk profit. .  . . EPA expects to save more
energy this way—perhaps as much as W percent of national electricity demand—than it could through
regulation."
   -  The Washington Post, "Green, Inc.,"
      by Jessica Mathews,  March 15,1991

     By installing the modem lighting in about 70 million square feet of space, nearly all of the state's
buildings, [Gov.] Wilson said that California will see its electrical energy requirements reduced by
more than 3 billion kilowatt hours over the period of the agreement, enough to power 167£00 homes."

   -  Los Angeles Times, "State Switches On to High-Efficiency
      Lighting  Program," May 31, 1991

     "Energy-efficient lighting is the wave of the future, one of those rare instances  where the "win-
win" message of environmental economics shines so brightly that success is virtually guaranteed."
   -  Green Market Alert, "EPA's Green Lights Program:
      Sometimes It Is Easy Being Green I" April 1991

     "The opportunity has been right in front of us all along, but this new, fine-tuned strategy to
organize all of the members in a particular industry into an effective 'energy/environment task force'
far outpaces anything yet attempted.  With Green Lights, everyone is a winner."

   -  Strategic Planning for Energy and the Environment,
      Summer  1991

     Green Lights is one of "a series of cooperative ventures based on the common-sense view that you
can get further by seeking people's help than suing them....EPA's Green Lights program encourages
the voluntary use of energy efficient lighting. Green Lights promotes energy conservation, which saves
electricity and cuts dawn on pollution."

   -  President Bush, in remarks at the Grand Canyon,
      Sept. 18, 1991

     "In addition to the environmental benefits of Green Lights, the program has the side benefit of
opening lines of communication between the government and corporate America. . . . This
communication link gives companies the opportunity to discuss lighting efficiency  as well as other
environmental issues with EPA."

   -  Building Operating Management Magazine, September 1991

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              Green  Lights  1991  Time
  Program launched
  at week-long confer-
  ence in Washington,
  DC. Features present-
  ations by EPA
  Administrator William
  K. Reilly and other
  EPA officials, discus-
  sions on technical
  projects, and displays of
  lighting products and
  services.

  Manufacturer ally program,
  launched in conjunction
  with Partner program
January
  Green Lights featured at
  the 1991 LightFair
  International Lighting
  Exposition
March
                                                               Reprinted from
                                                               Home Mechanix
                                                               magazine.

                                                               01991 by Times
                                                               Minor Magazines.
  Lighting Services Group
  established

  Green Lights workshop
  held in Portland, Ore., May
  15, co-sponsored by
  Region 10 and Portla
  General Electric Co.

  First two states-California
  and Maryland-join
  program; followed by two
  more in next two months
  (Oregon, June 28; Florida,
  July 15}
May
February
April
June
 Computerized Utility
 Rebate Registry released
  Lighting Management
  Company and Electric
  Utility Ally programs
  launched
  Customer Services
  Department established
  NLPIP Guide to
  Performance Evaluation of
  Efficient Lighting Products
  released
  First Light Brief flyer (on
  occupancy sensors)
  released

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me of  Major Milestones
           LtghtBoef
    Green Lights workshop
    held in Atlanta, including
    an exhibition of lighting
    products and services
  July
   Survey & Forecast of
   Marketplace Supply and
   Demand for Energy
  Efficient Lighting Products
  released
•  Light Brief flyers on
  financing, rolling
  financing, and T-8/T-10
  lamps released

September
• Decision Support System
 software launched Nov. 4
 at Washington, DC,
 workshop. Training
 workshops begin across
 the country.
• Lighting Upgrade Manual
 released

November
  August
    Lighting Services hotline
    established

    Second edition of Utility
    Rebate Registry released
    and non-utility financing
    source list added

    Light Brief flyers on
    electronic ballasts and
    reflectors released
October
• Nationwide direct
 marketing campaign
 begins
• Video released
• Naperville, III., joins as
 first city Partner
December

• Third edition of
 financing database
 (including utility and
 non-utility sources)
 released on diskette

• Namebrand-specific
 Electronic Ballast
 Specifier Report
 released

• Two Decision Support
 System workshop held

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                 First  Year  Success  Stories

                 Johnson  & Johnson:

                 Charter Member Upgrades 20 Facilities
                    Johnson & Johnson was one of the charter members of Green Lights. Under the
                 leadership of Harry Kauffman, Johnson & Johnson's corporate energy manager, the
                 company has comprehensively surveyed more than 1.9 million square feet of
                 corporate space located in New Jersey, Georgia, Massachusetts, California, Penn-
                 sylvania, Ohio, and Connecticut. The facilities run the gamut of use: office and
                 administration buildings, manufacturing facilities, warehouses, and research labo-
                 ratories. Even a parking lot was included.
                    Lighting upgrades are underway or complete at 20 facilities. These upgrades
                 areresponsib!eformorethan$338,(XX)mannualsavmgs,andmternalratesofi?eturn
                 (IRRs) range between a low of 1 7 percent and a high of 120 percent. Just as important
                 is the pollution prevented. The upgrades at these 20 facilities have meant that more
                 than 4.6 million kilowatt-hours per year of electricity use were avoided.
                    This is good news for the environment, for it translates into important pollution
                 prevention. Saving more than 4.6 million kilowatt-hours per year means that 7.3
                 million pounds of carbon dioxide, more than 55,000 pounds of sulfur dioxide; and
                 more than 27,000 pounds of nitrogen oxides are not released into the air. The
                 greenhouse effect, acid rain, smog — these are the problems directly alleviated by
                 serious energy efficiecy efforts such as those of Johnson & Johnson.
                    Johnson & Johnson has been involved in the installation of energy-efficient
                 designs and technologies since the early 1980s.  Their efforts over the last year have
                 included installing the latest in lighting technology: occupancy sensors, T8 fluores-
                 cent lamps, electronic ballasts, compact fluorescent lamps, dimming devices, and
                 high pressure sodium lamps.


                 Amoco Corporation:

                 6000 Sensors Save $316,413 per Year
                    The Amoco Corporation, a Green Lights charter partner, recently replaced
                 6,000 light switches with 6,000 occupancy sensors in its Naperville, Illinois, office
                 and laboratory buildings. Comprising more than 1.2 million square  feet, the
                 buildings were upgraded with the sensors early this year, effecting $316,413 in
                 savings annually and avoiding almost 4.5 million kilowatt-hours per year.


                 Preston Trucking:

                 Partner Receives Maryland Energy Award
                    Preston Trucking received the State of Maryland's first Energy Achievement
                 Award from Governor William Donald Schaefer on October 29, 1991 . Preston's
                 successful energy conservation program, led by Construction Manager Steve Gay,
                 reduces energy use, establishes an energy education program for company associ-
                 ates, and contributes to an improved environment. The new lighting system at
THE DRIVE TO DELIVER  Preston uses 40 percent less energy and will save the company more than $20,000
                 per year.
                    Preston changed more than 2,500 40-watt lamps to 32- watt T8 lamps; upgraded
                 950 fixtures with electronic ballasts; and converted the loading dock's mercury
                 vapor lighting system to high pressure sodium. The company saves approximately
                 300,000 kilowatt-hours annually.
e

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Elkhart General Hospital:
Upgrade Saves More Than $100,000
    Elkhart General Hospital in Elkhart, Indiana, became a Green Lights Partner in
June 1991.  A relatively small institution, yet with all of the high electricity use
associated with hospitals, Elkhart had completed about a third of their upgrade
work by the end of August 1991 and were projecting more than $100,000 in annual
energy savings.  The upgrade included the installation of T8 lamps, compact
fluorescents, electronic ballasts, occupancy sensors and timed switches, and re-
duced light levels where appropriate. Additionally, the reduced heat load has
solved some air conditioning problems and there has been a dramatic drop in
maintenance costs-annual maintenance savings of $20,000 are projected.

The Boeing Company:
Energy Use in Upgraded Buildings Drops 50%
    Boeing has upgraded an incredible 4 million square feet  since becoming a
Green Lights Charter Partner in January 1991. Led by Larry Friedman, energy
conservation manager for Boeing Support Services, the company has saved 14
million kilowatt-hours and almost $500,000 already. The energy savings translate
into reductions in power plant emissions of 26 million pounds of carbon dioxide,
110,000 pounds of sulfur dioxide, and 70,000 pounds of nitrogen oxides. Thaf s a
lot of pollution taken out of our air-and Boeing is just getting started. They have 64
million square feet to go, and they're working on it.

Charter  Partners  Report Progress

    A large number of Green Lights partners who have been in the program for a year are
just completing the survey phase of their effort A combined total of more man 16 million
square feet has been surveyed by Browrdr^-FenisIrdustn^,Yelbwrraght Corporation,
Whirlpool Corporation, Union Camp Corporation, Joseph E Seagram & Sons, Texaco,
Hasbro, Inc., Gerber Products, and American Standard, Inc.
    Other companies are further along. The Oliver Carr Company in Washington,
DC,hasupgradedmorethanl.3 million square feet through delamping,reballasting/
and reflector installation, for an estimated annual savings of $480,000. The Lone Star
Steel Company in Texas has upgraded more than 400,000 square feet by replacing
mercury vapor lamps with  high pressure sodium lamps and through general
delamping. Officials plan to install occupancy sensors and to reduce daily lighting
hours in remote facilities from 24 to 3. Wolverine World Wide, Inc., in Michigan has
upgraded its exit signs by replacing incandescent lamps with fluorescent. Workers
also are installing reflectors in many fixtures.
    Warner-Lambert in Morris Plains, New Jersey, has installed almost 3,500 T8
fluorescent lamps, which will yield an annual savings of $190,000.  Phillips
Petroleum has replaced approximately 16,000 40-watt lamps with 34-watt lamps,
for an annual savings of $17,000; almost 500 incandescent lamps have been replaced
with compact fluorescent lamps, yielding annual savings of $7,000. Additionally,
lighting management systems were installed at 38 locations. American Express in
New York has completed 85 percent of a  1.6 million square-foot installation.
Annual savings of almost $285,000 will be realized through the use of T8 lamps,
reduction in lighting hours, and occupancy sensors.
    The Polaroid Corporation in Waltham, Massachusetts has surveyed almost 1.3
million of its square feet and begun upgrades. Generally, T8 fluorescent lamps are
being installed with electronic  ballasts; compact fluorescents are replacing
incandescents; mercury vapor lamps are giving way to high pressure sodium
lamps; and some occupancy sensors are being installed.

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The  Future  of  Green  Lights

   The first year of Green Lights has validated the basic principles of the voluntary
corporate leadership approach to energy efficiency. And, not surprisingly, it has
raised tantalizing prospects for the year to come. The program has five goals for the
coming years:

•  Increase participation:  The program's goal for 1992 is the recruitment of
   another 3 to 5 percent of the nation's square footage.

•  Support implementation: Green Lights participants have taken on a serious
   responsibility, and the program office is committed to making their implemen-
   tation as profitable and quality-enhancing as possible. Our goal is to ha ve every
   Green Lights participant complete one major lighting upgrade in 1992.

•  Broaden program participation: Commercial, industrial, and institutional
   users account for 75 percent of the nation's lighting electricity use; they were the
   natural first audience for the Green Lights Program. However, in the coming
   year, the program will begin outreach to the residential sector, to broaden
   awareness of the pollution prevention benefits of energy efficiency.

•  Accelerate market transformation: Green Lights will claim success when the
   program isn't needed anymore; on that day, lighting will be done "smart"
   without any extra effort or thought on the part of the customer, vendor or
   lighting consultant, and a dynamic of continual improvement in the lighting
   marketplace will be set into motion.

•  Explore replication of the program in other technology areas: Green Lights
   will not be the last voluntary energy-efficiency program; it is the prototype for
   many others. By the end of 1992, EPA hopes to offer a Green Buildings program
   and/or a Green Energy Corporation program to further the nation's goal of
   preventing pollution.
Bulletin  Board  Available in March

   Green Lights has established an electronic bulletin board, available free of
charge to the general public, which is to include current program information,
news, participant lists, and technical information about energy-efficient lighting.
Designed to provide easy access to program information, the bulletin board will be
accessible by modem beginning in March.
   To use the bulletin board:
   •  Set up a 2400 or 9600 baud modem and modem software on your PC (9600
       baud capacity available end of March);
   •  Set the parameters on your communications software to
          data bits: 8
          parity: N
          stop bits: 1
   •  Dial (202) 775-6671;
   •  Answer the questions (e.g., name, city, type of monitor) to log on;
   •  When prompted, choose "register" and answer the questions;
   •  Once you reach the Main Menu, explore the "Bulletins" and "Program
       Information" sections for information on Green Lights.
   Questions? Fax (202) 775-6680.

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Selected  Green Lights  Materials

   Green Lights produces several information and promotional products.

Video: A general overview of the program as well as a section on the program's
more technical aspects.

Brochure: A general overview of the program.

Light Briefs: Technical product description flyers for the layperson; they cover
such topics as electronic ballasts, energy-efficient lamps, occupancy sensors, reflec-
tors, disposal of lighting products, and financing options.

'Financing Database: Diskette containing a database of funding sources from
utilities, energy-service companies, and government sources.

*Update newsletters: Monthly newsletters distributed to all program participants,
designed to provide the latest information on all aspects of the program.

Slide Show: A 46-slide presentation with annotations; describes the Green Lights
program in detail.

*Camera-ready logos: Color and black and white versions of theGreen Lights logo,
distributed for participants' use in their own printed materials.

'Buttons: Imprinted with the color Green Lights logo.

'Window Decals: Stickers imprinted with the color logo.

   'Available only to program participants
     Green  Lights
       dfeEiriroiMitil PretMtm Agnq
     For more
  information:
EPA Green Lights
     (ANR-445)
 Washington, DC
        20460

      Customer
  Service Center
  (202)  775-6650
(202) 775-6680 fax

  (202)  775-6671
   bulletin board

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 Partners  Talk  About

 Green  Lights

   "Green Lights sets a savings goal attainable by any institution
 committed to energy savings. By providing independent verification
 of the value of lighting efficiency methods, Green Lights removes
 barriers normally faced by non-profit institutions leery of many
 claims. We have found that adhering to the Green Lights standard
 can successfully reduce lighting wattage by over 65 percent with no
 sacrifice in lighting quality."
   - Lindsey Audin
    Manager of Energy Conservation
    Columbia University
      "We signed up because of the mathematics of the situation. I
saw an opportunity to benefit the company in the short-term, and the
environment and the company in the long-term.
      "I could see that if we lit our properties better and saved
money and energy, the environment would be better and long-term
consumption  rates would be  lower.  It's an opportunity for
government, industry, and power generation companies to all
benefit."
  - Sidney Kirschna
    President
    National Service Industries, Inc.


   "For Xerox, Green Lights  is a major energy conservation
program.  Participation in Green Lights allows us to more clearly
focus on not only the impact that lighting has on the environment,
but also the impact that lighting has on our bottom line."
  - B. Lum Lee
    Manager, Energy and Recycling Programs
    Xerox Corporation
   "Clean air and energy conservation are compatible goals. By
encouraging efficient use of lighting and reducing demand for
electricity, the Green Lights program demonstrates how American
creativity can lead to cost-effective and practical solutions to our
complex environmental problems."
  - Lodwrick M. Cook
    Chairman, Chief Executive Officer
    ARCO

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Allies Talk About Green  Lights
   "We're pleased to participate in the Green Lights program. It's
gone a long way in just a few months to give lighting upgrading
the credibility it deserves.  And giving energy efficiency the
awareness it needs. Green Lights is great for the environment and
great for business. We've already recruited two Partners and we're
excited about helping Green Lights expand its reach."
   -Gary Mendelsohn, president, Imperial Lighting
    Maintenance Company, in Mainliqhter.
    November 1991.
   "We're very optimistic that Green Lights will be a successful
program. The 1990s and beyond will be dominated by energy and
environmental issues.  We expect to do our part to help the
environment and we expect that our customers will do their part."
  - Paul Von Paumgartten, manager of lighting
    services, Johnson Controls, Inc., in The
    Construction Specifier. October 1991.
   "The educational aspects of the program are particularly
important."
  - Peter Caldwell, vice president of marketing.
    Electronic Ballast Technology, Inc., in Energy
    User News. January 1992.

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           Green  Lights Partners
                      (as of March 2, 1992)
                         Charter Partners
©Bell Atlantic
                                 § THE
                                 = OLIVER
                                 = CARR
                  .Gerber
Maytag The Gillette Company
                                            GENERAL DYNAMICS
                                            »
                                    Polaroid
                                    <» x?
                                     Whirlpool
                                               Union Camp
                                                      WOLVERINE
                                                             WOU
A&C


a    ABB
    Jaxan UDntnt

Health Care Wbrktwlde
                          Alaska Airlines, Inc. ALLIANCE
           Albany General Hospital            jnu/vn-xM i m»
       m       American-Standard /MJTECHJI
                  Bank of America

       B.R Exploration-Alaska
                                 Bellcore
                        i AT ;
                                             ARCO
        Carnegie Mellon University
       Chevron
  ^Continental
   Insurance.
                               Bay Area Hospital
                                 E.J. Brach Corp.
                                               .Southern Bel
                                               1 South Central Bel
                            American Council for an
                            Energy Efficient Economy

                            Ashland. . ^   4. _ 4
                                   Automatic Data
                                   Processing, lnc.|

                                Baxter
                                                       Carrier Corp., North
                                  Central Qncjina Bank

                              Colonial Pacific Leasing

                                Colonial Pipeline
                                               *xv*
      THIDCXTMCOtfOROTOM
F.T.N EPRI
                               FREIGHT CARRIERS CORPORATION
                                Columbia University

                            comma
G.M. Popkey Company, Inc.

Genovese Drug Stores, Inc.

GRAINGER.
            GOOD
Hewlett-Packard Co.

Hoechst
   Jaakko Poyry
                  ^ ^ K H A R T
     Domino's Pizza Corp.  «WCORPORA3ION
                  Data General Corp.

                DURACELL  *  The First National
                     Dresser Rand   Bank of Chicago

                           H/AWORTH
                                   Georgia
                                     M
  Honeywell, Inc.
•Humana
                                                   Horizon Air Industries, Inc.

                                                 International Technology Corp.
                                       , Karastan Bigelow
                                         . .  _    .
                                         L.L Bean, inc.
         .  Jewel Food Stores  Learning Center, Inc.
                        Kinder-Care      ]/\ A
                                                      Kenyon Oil Co., Inc.

                                                   Aerospace and Defense
      EPA. as a matter of policy, does not endorse the institutions listed above or their products or services.

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             Green  Lights  Partners
                         (as of March 2, 1992)
                              INSON|uB»faf f\
                                               Louisville Resource Conservation Council
 MagneTek, Inc.
    The Marriott Corp.
     MOTOROLA
       Monsanto
t* National Westminster Bancorp
                                         LONE STAR STEEL
                                                            McKeesport Hospital
          NOR™ CAROLINA    .     -.
          ALTERNATIVE ENEBCY  NOlth Utt3Wa
          CORPORATION
 PALMER
BELLEVUE
CORPORATION  ^
  Perry Drug Stores
                      Community Hospital
                                                            Herman miller
                                                          The Melville Corporation
                                                                  USAJNC.
                                                            YMCA   OECO Corp.
                                                     Oxford Properties Florida, Inc.
                                       NYNEX
                                                  Northern Illinois
              PASADENA   KNIK	SI  &
              nrYrnoLLECE
                   Richman Gordman Inc. ^
                                    THE DRIVE TO DELIVER a
 SRedlands Federal Bank
   A ctnhay of safety, seafffyandstm&ii.
                                                 ' Medical Center
                                                             „„
MSQIANCE COMMNT
  OTMUUCA
                         Buildjngs
 Tenneco Minerals     Shell
     Trade Press Publishing Corp.
 rU| j Undeiwriters Laboratories Inc.*
                                                                   Mmarle
                                            Seated Air Corporation
                                          uper Valu Stores, Inc. i

                                  DRUG Toshiba America   §. TRANSAMERICA
                                           Consumer Products, Inc.
             The University of  The University of Miami
             Illinois at Chicagoxr^ ... u  ,.    ..... .
                       »™ ^ \ Walton Monroe Mills Inc..
       _paffiaA
                      HOTELS 8. RESORTS
                               Vf~nr\\/  iMrnnml
                               XEROX IIH
                          GOVERNMENT PARTNERS:
The State of California    The State of Florida      The State of Idaho  The State
The State of Missouri
        _.         BBNapc
       jBjSSSb.
The State iKft) of South Dakota      The City of Houston, Texas
                                                                   of Maryland
                                                        Broward County, Florida
                                                          U.S. Virgin Islands
                         GREEN UGHTS
                       Association of Professional Energy Managers
                  Consulting Engineers Council of Metropolitan Washington
                      Illuminating Engineering Society of North America
                 InterNational Association of Lighting Management Companies
        EPA. as a matter of policy, does not endorse the institutions listed above or their products or services.

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          Green    Lights   Allies
                        (as  of March  2,  1992)
 Lighting Management
     Company Allies

     A-1 Lighting Sarvica Company
  ABD lighting Managamanl Company
        Anna Corporation
     Alliad Lighting Sarvicat he.
       Amricin lighting toe.
      Amtach Lighting Sanfcat
     Approvad Lighting Corporation
       Barnay Roth Company
  Broadway Maintananca Company |NJ)
        ChNiy City Bactric
     Chieago-Ediion Corporation
        Colorado lighting
    Contom  Bactric Company, he.
   Cootinaatat Lighting Sonnets, he
     Craatiw Lighting Matotananca
 Efficiant Lighting and Maintananca. he.
     Enargy Control!» Conctpti
     Evaraady Badric Company
 Huomcant MaJntaaanca Company (CO)
 Hnorascoot Maintaoanci Sonriea. he.|R)
Ruoraicant MaJntaunca Sank* he. (MS)
 Fbomcant Maintananca Sign Co. |AL)
 Ganaral Lighting and Sign Sarvica, Inc.
       UkmBax Corporation
 Inparial Lighting Maatananca Campany
         UghtanUp.hc.
     lighting Maintananca, toe. (IL)
 Lighting Mantananca and Sanica. he
   Lighting Managamant Corporation
       Lighting Spun Too!
       Lmhaira Sanica, he.
      Mastar Lighting Sonriea
 Mh Ughting and Bactrie Sanica, he.
 Manny Bactrie Maintananca Company
   NawMaxieotnornConnlant*
       Pbmad lighting, toe.
     Pram lighting Managamant
 Prolka Lighting and Sign Mantananca
  PuQ0t Enwfly MtMQuniflt SyUMn
    SICAEIadiical&llaiatMaKa
      Stay-Ua Ughting Sanica
       Subunan Ughting, be.
 Suparior Light and Sign Mahtananca Co.
     Sylvan ia Ughting Sanicas
Unitad Bactrieal Mantananca Corporatioa
     Unnanal lighting Sonieos
      USAcMrgyCorporatJon
       VittaUniwullnc.
                 Electric Utility Allies
                   Arizona Public Sanica Company
                        Atlantic Enargy
                     BiKtonEditonCoinpany
                      Carttal Mate Powar
                     CityafGootgatowaTmf
                     CilyUtjIhmofSprhgfiald
                 Consolidatad Edwin of Naw York, he.
                      Ouka Powar Company
                     Enargy Rasowea Contar
                  Brant County Publk Utility District
                 Janoy Cantral Powar & Light Company
                     Kansas CkyPowar Alight
               LotAngalasDaoartmanlofWatwandPowar
                     Naw York Pwwr Aotborty
                     O&ABottkCooparatNa
                   Pacific Eat & Elactric Company
                   MAagalat light Dapartraant
                  Portland Banaral Ekctrie Company
                        PSI Enargy, he.
                   P.UJ>.t1 of Grayt Harbor Cowty
                P*lic Sanica Bactrie and 6n Campany
                 Pugat Sound Pmwr & Ught Company
                       Bortlarirl Bactric
                 Sacnmanto Munictoal Utility District
                       SakRiMfPnjact
                 Saorn Carolina Bactric & Bat Company
                 Sooth teoltaa PubHc Sanrica Anmorily

                     Sprtogfiold Utilly Board
                        Tampa Bactric
                   Tauton Municipal Lighting Punt
                  Tha UHITB. Syctam of Companios
                 Wteonth Bactric Pawar Company
EPA. as a matter of policy, does not endorse the institutions listed
              above or their products or services.

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                       Green   Lights   Allies
                                      (as  of March 2, 1992)
A.LP. Lighting + Calling Products
Advance Control Technologies, Inc.
Advanced Transformer Company
Amalco Metals. Inc.
American Electric
American Energy Management
American Lighting Corporation
American Lighting Systems
American Illuminetic*. Inc.
American Systems and Services
Appliance Control Technology, Inc.
Art Directions Inc.
Badger USA. Inc.
Brayer Lighting, Inc.
Bright Side Lighting
Browalee Lighting
Bryant Electric
Canton*. Electronics International
Cooper Lighting
C.E.W. lighting. Inc.
CMB Associates. Inc.
CSL lighting Mfg., Inc.
Dark To Ught Inc.
Davis Controls Corporation
Dear Maantactariag Corporation
DeraLBX Industries
Dnray Reorescent Masofacajriag
Onro-Test Corporation
Dynamic Energy Products, Inc.
Edison Price Lighting
Baa USA, Inc.
Boctmnte Ballast Technology. Inc.
Emergency Safety Products. Inc.
Energy Dedga Corporation
Enersave Company
Enertron Technologies, Inc.
Enterprise Lighting, Inc.
Environmental Energy Qronp
ESCO International
Ettaladnstries
Exitronix Division of Bnrron Mamrfacuriag
Corporation
Haxhwatl Corporation
RexlHelK.
FTI
MCircle Ballast Becyclers
i6E Lighting
Beissaohorger Manufacturing
The Qearyto Qroep
Beardiaa Ugbting Controls. Inc.
     Manufacturer Allies

Harris Manufacturing, Inc.
Heath Company
Hatherington Industries
Holopnnna Company, Inc.
Honeywell Inc.
House 0'Lite
Hubholl Incorporated^ Lighting Division
Illumination Control Systems
International Conservation Equipment. Inc.
International Energy Conservation Systems
Janmar Lighting
Jadcor Energy Management Company, Inc.
Johnson Controls. Inc.
K-Ute Division of Id Acrylies/K-S-H Inc.
Kennll
Kilowatt Saver, Inc.
The Hrlin Company
Lamer lighting Company, Inc.
LJQfct cMfQy Cofporaoofl
Lighting Resonrcas, Inc.
UghlMedM Corporation
Ughtron of Cornwall, Inc.
Utetronics International
Ugntway Industries
Uthonia Lighting
Lortnlndnstries
Lnmalech Corporation

Magnarey International
MagneTek.lnc.
3M
ML Systems
Mor-Utn
Motorola Lighting, Inc.
Mete Emergency Lighting, Inc.
MyTech Corporation
NOVA Conservation and Load M
Novttas.lK.

Omega Energy Inc.
Optical Coating Lahoratory Inc.
Optilightlnc.
OrEqnallnc.
OSRAM Corporation
Paramount Industries
Parke Industries. Inc.
Parrisn Lighting and Engineering, Inc.
Peeriess Lighting Corporation
Pescnel Energy, Inc.
Philips Lighting Company
Poworline Commuiications, Inc.
PreHnish Metals. Inc.
Prime Ballast
PrHchntt Wilson Group, Inc.
Prellght
RAB Electric Manufacturing Company
Reflect-A-Ught
Reflective Ught Technologies
Renrtec Systems
Ron Bros. Inc.
Rand Lighting, Inc.
Salesco Systems USA
Scientific Componsnt Systems
Sharlin-Ute
Sirveriight Corporation
Shnkar Lighting Rxtnre Company. Inc.
Solar Kinetics, Inc.
Sonthco Metal Services, Inc.
SPt Lighting Inc.
Steriing,RMC
Sytvaaia Lighting Division
Tamarack Corporation
Teron Lighting
Torrain.lM.
Thomas Indnstries. Inc.
Topaz Energy Systems, Inc.
Toshiha America Contmnsr Prodncts, Inc.
Triad Technologies
UA Ught Bnlh, Inc.
Ulster Precision, Inc.
UNENCO
United Energy, Inc.
United Energy Sonth
Vebnont Electric
Venmra Lighting International

Warner Technologies
The Wntt Stopper, Inc.
Hf. Williams, Inc.
Wisnurq Ught Company. Inc.
XtraUght
X-Tra Ught Systems, Inc.
          EPA, as a
                                                        orsemces.

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