LED Streetlights Are Giving Neighborhoods the Blues
"For some, those first LED lights have been a fiasco. The harsh glare of certain blue-rich designs is now thought to disrupt peopleβs sleep patterns and harm nocturnal animals. And these concerns have been heaped on the complaints of astronomers, who as far back as 2009 have criticized the new lights. Thatβs the year the International Dark-Sky Association, a coalition that opposes light pollution, started worrying that blue-rich LEDs could be βa disaster for dark skies and the environment,β says Chris Monrad, a director of IDA and a lighting consultant in Tucson."
"When my city of Newton, Mass., announced plans to install LED streetlights in 2014, I was optimistic. Iβm all for energy conservation, and I was happy with the LED bulbs in my home office. But months later, returning from a weekβs vacation in rural Maine, I was shocked to find my neighborhood lit by a stark bluish blaze that washed out almost all of the stars in the night sky."
"Lately, lighting companies have introduced LED streetlights with a warmer-hued output, and municipalities have begun to adopt them. Some communities, too, are using smart lighting controls to minimize light pollution. They are welcome changes, but theyβre happening none too soon: An estimated 10 percent of all outdoor lighting [PDF] in the United States was switched over to an earlier generation of LEDs, which included those problematic blue-rich varieties, at a potential cost of billions of dollars."