Silicon Valley all aglow on green lighting

June 28, 2010, 4:05pm

SAN FRANCISCO, June 28 (Reuters) – Silicon Valley has seen the light, and it's LED.

The incandescent light bulb has had the global lighting market in its grip for more than 130 years, building into a more than $100 billion industry.

But green concerns about efficiency spell an end to the era, and the US technology capital sees light-emitting diodes, or LEDs, as the new king.

''Lighting is going to completely change over the course of this decade,'' said Alan Salzman, chief executive of Silicon Valley-based venture fund VantagePoint Venture Partners.

His firm has $4.5 billion in committed capital in startups across different sectors, but lighting is an area he is very bullish on.

''The largest sector in terms of companies in our portfolio is lighting,'' Salzman said.

While many love the look of the light cast by incandescent bulbs, none like the high energy bills.

Nations around the world, including the United States, are phasing in efficiency standards that will eliminate the incandescents if no major energy improvements happen.

Investors are betting on other technologies taking hold.

Compact fluorescent light (CFL) bulbs so far have been the only real alternative to conventional bulbs but they contain mercury and many don't like the quality of the light.

LED lights, on the other hand, contain no mercury, have a long life and are very energy efficient.

LEDs, made of diodes or chips, have come a long way since the first practical LED was a developed in 1962. Its sole color was red. Now developers produce light colors across the spectrum.

They consume only about 20 percent of the energy used by incandescent bulbs. With about 20 percent of the world's electricity used for lighting, switching to LEDs would generate significant energy savings and cut greenhouse gas emissions while nations debate how to price carbon dioxide pollution.

There is one major hurdle for mass adoption of LEDs -- they cost too much. Experts say that for the market to take off, good quality LED lights need to available under $10. Current bulbs cost many times that.

Investors are betting heavily the cost will fall quickly as LED start-ups achieve scale and the technology advances.

''The market really started shifting in the last 12 months,'' said Warner Philips, co-founder of LED start-up Lemnis Lighting and great grandson of the founder of Dutch electronics giant Philips Electronics.

Lemnis introduced its first LED bulb, called Pharox, that can go into a standard light socket about four years ago. The latest version can last around 25 years, based on four hours of daily operation, but it costs $25.

The price has halved in a short time. Lemnis had been selling LED bulbs around $50 only about six months ago and Philips expects the price to fall below the crucial $10 level soon.

''That will be probably be in the first half of next year,'' he said.

LEDs by 2020 will account for nearly half of the $4.4 billion US market for lamps in the commercial, industrial and outdoor stationary sectors, predicted Pike Research, which tracks the market.