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April 19, 2007
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Thursday
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Rabi-us-Sani 01, 1428
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‘Ban-the-bulb’ campaign in India
BANGALORE: Greenpeace launched a campaign across Indian on Wednesday to push for a ban on the common light bulb to cut greenhouse gas emissions and fight climate change.
The group is campaigning to have incandescent bulbs banned and replaced with compact fluorescent lamps (CFL), a move it says will help India save 12,000 megawatts of electricity a year — or four per cent of carbon dioxide emissions.
Greenpeace aims to collect one million signatures on a “ban-the-bulb” petition it will present to Indian policymakers, said G. Ananthapadmanabhan, executive director of the environmental group’s India chapter.
“It needs a strong call from the public to push governments to take required steps,” Ananthapadmanabhan said in a statement here. “With this petition we want to empower people to call on their government to implement common sense.” Incandescent bulbs lose 90 per cent of the energy that goes into them as heat while a CFL bulb uses about 20 per cent of the electricity to produce the same amount of light.
Every watt of electricity produced involves carbon dioxide emissions that contribute to greenhouse gases and global warming, because the major source of electricity in India is coal-fuelled power plants.—AFP
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