| Incandescent lamp |
| Thermostatic valve controlling a living-room radiator |
If your space heating system is electrical (as it is in some Danish homes and most Norwegian homes, for example), then replacing incandescent lamps with low-energy sources will result in zero net change in fuel costs!
In the summer months there is no need for space heating, but there is also much less need for electric lighting, since the daylight hours are longer and people spend more of their waking hours out of doors. Replacing incandescent lamps with low-energy sources out of doors and in rooms that are not normally heated does indeed save energy. The latter also last much longer than traditional light bulbs, so you incur a significantly lower risk of falling off your ladder to replace them.
Just as the sheep produces both wool and mutton, each of which fulfills basic human needs, so the incandescent lamp produces both light and heat, which are also basic human needs.
This great electric lamp deceit is not confined to Denmark. It has been perpetrated in all the world’s industrialised countries, unquestioned by the news media, the democratically elected politicians, the technical press and the academic world alike. The compulsory ban on the sale of incandescent lamps (other than for specialised applications) that has now been introduced into the law in all these countries has been justified using the phoney argument that it is beneficial for the planet. Even though other arguments against the ban have been aired in public, no mainstream climate sceptic has opened his mouth to expose the fundamental lie – not even Bjørn Lomborg, who also hails from Denmark. So this one very durable, very widespread deceit exposes something rotten, not just in the state of Denmark, but in the whole of civilised society.
![]() |
| Sunrise at Angkor Wat, Cambodia. The light from the sun comprises all the visible colours in a continuous spectrum |
![]() |
| Low-energy lamp |
Throughout the 20th century, owning a lamp factory was one of the surest routes to wealth. The technology was low, such patents as covered it soon lapsed, and development costs were zero. Incandescent lamps were designed to fail after an average of 1000 hours, so the demand for them from private consumers was predictable and uninfluenced by fashion. So what were the true motives of powers-that-be for banning these lamps?
- Coercing consumers into using more oil and gas benefits the companies engaged in winning these fuels.
- It reduces the need to invest in additional electricity generating capacity.
- The lamp industry benefits from the increased compulsory sale of lamps that cost more.
- The researchers benefit from increased patent royalties on high-tech products that are subject to on-going development.
- Wealthy industrialised countries benefit by forestalling the migration of low-tech manufacturing to poorer countries, thereby maintaining the gap between the rich and the poor.
- This absence of transparency by the “powers-that-be” reveals that the ruling elite collaborates across international boarders to implement an agenda that is different from the one that the general public firmly believes they have.
- It defines just how many would-be iconoclasts are in the pockets of the ruling class.
- It demonstrates the mendacity of both sides in the global debate on the influence of people on the greenhouse effect.
- Transparency and political independence are prerequisites for democracy. The lamp deceit shows that government decisions are neither transparent nor independent of other governments.
- Freedom of speech is a hollow phrase if none of the press is prepared to expose this particular deceipt.
- Textbook capitalism depends on market transparency. The lamp deceit illustrates how capitalism really functions.


5 comments:
The answer is quite easy: A.P. Møller-Mærsk
You thought that was easy did you? That's great! Repeat after me, "He has nothing on at all!"
No, I won't - it would ruin my personal life.
I agree that there is a problem. And I agree that people in general should be more aware of how their energy is produced.
But are you sure, your electricity is imported from Norwegian and Swedish hydroelectric and nuclear power stations?
I am sure that a significant proportion of the electricity consumed in Denmark is generated in Sweden and Norway, because there are several submarine power cables crossing the Sound not far from where I live, and disruption to supplies in Sweden can cause blackouts in Copenhagen. But this Post is more about Truth and Taboos than about electrical engineering.
Post a Comment