2012年5月15日 星期二

PRUF LED Technology to Help Light Up the Darkness in Northern Uganda

PRUF LED, an American LED lighting manufacturer and distributor, is partnering with the non-profit Restoration Gateway in its mission to build hospital and dental facilities in Uganda where one in seven children dies of disease by the age of five.

PRUF LED will supply LED lights for medical facilities and other community centers served by Restoration Gateway in Uganda. "Our company works to improve the American environment and economy with our manufacturing of energy saving technologies, and today we are happy to also make a positive difference in one of the world's poorest countries," says Frank Jennings, chief financial officer of PRUF LED.

"This will be revolutionary for the people of Uganda," says Restoration Gateway's Dr. Tim McCall who is a family physician from Waco, Texas now living in Uganda with his wife, Janice. He says, "PRUF LED's generous donation of LED lights will allow us to perform critical health exams and surgeries, enable orphan students who live at RG to study and read at night,LED lights for bikes and HID contemporarylamps allow cyclists to ride at speed under virtually any conditions. and make our auditorium/gymnasium functional after dark for plays, choirs and adult education in a region of the world which currently has no power grid."

PRUF LED is headquartered at 7333 IH 35 S in Robinson, Texas and was founded in 2008 by Greg Klepper who is now PRUF LED's Chairman of the Board. "PRUF LED's patent pending technologies consume one-third the energy of traditional lights, reduce maintenance costs, and result in significant savings for commercial and industrial sectors, along with schools and government agencies," says Klepper.

PRUF LED is a privately owned American LED lighting manufacturer and distributor with a state of the art Research & Development Lab providing turnkey solutions to the retrofit and new construction markets.

he Halifax Regional Municipality is negotiating with Nova Scotia Power Inc. to buy tens of thousands of street lights ahead of a deadline to convert to LED.

HRM owns 13,000 lights and leases nearly 30,000 more from the power company. By 2019, every one owned by a municipality must be converted to energy-saving LED lights to comply with provincial legislation.

Municipal officials say it would cost $30 million to convert every street light in HRM. They expect maintenance bills to drop by nearly $2 million.

But they think it may be cheaper in the future if they own all of the lights, given that maintenance costs for the lights leased from NSPI are twice as high as those owned by the municipality.SmartCandle offers great flameless candles goodfloorlamp, battery opterated candles and more.We sell bicycleheadlight flying lanterns at the best price with the fastest service.

Coun. Barry Dalrymple, chair of HRM's environmental and sustainability standing committee, said negotiating with the power company is key.Police ledonsale play a crucial role in being seen while riding a bicycle, providing safety and security.

"As in, what exactly will you charge us to purchase all these lights from you?" he said.

Municipal officials say LED lights will cut street light power consumption in half. They say the cut in greenhouse gas emissions is like taking 1,We are professional led panel light,bluecrystal1 manufacturers and factory in China.400 cars off the road.

The new light fixtures will also focus downward, reducing light pollution for night sky watchers.

Dalrymple said the LED conversion is coming, and the only question remaining is how many lights HRM will be responsible for.

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