2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.techfore.2018.01.013
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Future indoor light and associated energy consumption based on professionals' visions: A practice- and network-oriented analysis

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Cited by 5 publications
(3 citation statements)
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References 57 publications
(62 reference statements)
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“…Reliability of power in many countries is not guaranteed; electricity tariff is high in many countries; cooking appliances are mostly imported using scarce foreign currency Driven by a combination of government support for appliance purchases, shifting subsidies from kerosene or LPG to electricity; community-level consultation and awareness campaigns about the hazards associated with indoor air pollution from the use of fuelwood, coal and kerosene, as well as education on the multiple benefits of electric cooking (Martínez-Gómez et al 2016;Yangka and Diesendorf 2016;Martínez et al 2017;Gould and Urpelainen 2018;Dendup and Arimura 2019;Pattanayak et al 2019) Shift to LED lamps People spend increasing amounts of time indoors, with heavy dependence on and demand for artificial lighting (Ding et al 2020) Government incentives, utility incentive (Bertoldi et al 2021). EU bans on directional and non-directional halogen bulbs (Franceschini et al 2018)…”
Section: Improve Efficiency Of Cooking Appliancesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Reliability of power in many countries is not guaranteed; electricity tariff is high in many countries; cooking appliances are mostly imported using scarce foreign currency Driven by a combination of government support for appliance purchases, shifting subsidies from kerosene or LPG to electricity; community-level consultation and awareness campaigns about the hazards associated with indoor air pollution from the use of fuelwood, coal and kerosene, as well as education on the multiple benefits of electric cooking (Martínez-Gómez et al 2016;Yangka and Diesendorf 2016;Martínez et al 2017;Gould and Urpelainen 2018;Dendup and Arimura 2019;Pattanayak et al 2019) Shift to LED lamps People spend increasing amounts of time indoors, with heavy dependence on and demand for artificial lighting (Ding et al 2020) Government incentives, utility incentive (Bertoldi et al 2021). EU bans on directional and non-directional halogen bulbs (Franceschini et al 2018)…”
Section: Improve Efficiency Of Cooking Appliancesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…LED prices decreased quickly by more than 85% between 2008 and 2012 (Sanderson and Simons 2014), because of scale economies, standardisation and commoditisation of LED chip technology, and improved manufacturing techniques. Because of further rapid developments to meet consumer tastes, LEDs came to be seen as the future of domestic lighting (Franceschini et al 2018). Acknowledging these changing views, the 2016 and 2018 European bans on directional and nondirectional halogen bulbs explicitly intended to further accelerate the LED transition and reduce energy consumption for residential lighting.…”
Section: Policy Sequencing and Packaging To Strengthen Enabling Condi...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Further LED diffusion was driven both by declining costs and by new functionalities that allowed consumers to control colour and light intensity to create ambience (Monreal et al, 2016). Because of these rapid developments, LEDs came to be seen as the future of domestic lighting (Franceschini et al, 2018). The 2016 and 2018 European bans on directional and non-directional halogen bulbs explicitly intended to further accelerate the LED-transition and reduce energy consumption for residential lighting.…”
Section: Actors and Policiesmentioning
confidence: 99%