|
PRESS RELEASE | ANL
LIGHTING LLC WEST
POINT BEGINS BRIGHTER NEW DECADE WITH GREEN
TECHNOLOGY
RELEASE IMMEDIATELY
January 22, 2010
Contact: Nancy Cozean
845 486.1283
Poughkeepsie, NY The United States Military
Academy at West Point, known for its time-honored
traditions, is entering the New Year by
doing away with one, changing light bulbs.
This week the nation’s oldest, continually
occupied military post will begin brightening
itself up with a semi conductor light source.
ANL Lighting LLC of Poughkeepsie, NY was
chosen to retrofit the Army’s lighting
system with energy-saving and more durable
light-emitting diodes (LEDs). West Point
will be one of the first and best-known
institutions in the United States to retrofit
its primary lighting systems with the new
technology. ANL Lighting’s uniqueness
is its specialization
in LED retrofits that avoid more
costly and complicated system replacements.
The Distributor for the project at West
Point, Charles Byers of Pleasant Valley
Energy Company, noted ANL Lighting was chosen
because its products provided significant
energy reduction and lighting enhancement.
“We project that by switching to LEDs,
West Point will save 80 per cent in energy
with ANL’s external Veteran-Lite TM
fixture, and it will have a much brighter
light,” Byers, said. “The savings
will be even greater considering that we
are able to economically upgrade the existing
infrastructure, and avoid the costs and
disruption of replacing it entirely.”
The British discovered electro luminescence
just two decades after Thomas Edison’s
development of the commercially practical
light bulb in 1879. However, it has been
an 88-year-wait for the breakthrough that
makes LED illumination practical. President
and founder of ANL Lighting, LLC, Andy Neal,
studied and worked in Great Britain with
many pioneers in the field, and refined
his skills in the entertainment field. “At
this very moment we are moving from the
season of lights into a new age of light
that will change the world,” he said.
LED lighting significantly reduces long-term
illumination costs. Test show that LEDs
are eight times more efficient than incandescent
bulbs and last up to 50,000 hours or 25
time longer. A “long –life”
incandescent bulb usually lasts only 2,000
hours. A LED switched on today can burn
four hours every night and still light up
30 years later.
The latest LED advances come just in time.
In two years national efficiency regulations
will phase out the incandescent bulb.
More rapid and widespread application of
LED illumination has been slowed by relatively
higher installation costs, according to
Neal. ANL has lowered the cost barrier by
using its patented manufacturing processes
and by specializing in retrofits. The company’s
workforce, of whom disabled military veterans
are involved, is at the Mid Hudson Workshop
for the Disabled in the City of Poughkeepsie.
Neal noted that ANL is located in the Mid-Hudson
Valley “because it is one of America’s
technological seedbeds and a great place
to do well economically while doing good
socially and environmentally.” |