OK then, let’s try this for an “environmental” argument.
I believe ChuckFicken’s savings in terms of KwHs consumed a little inflated, if for no other reason no seasonality has been factored in. However, no matter. I reckon in a week in the winter I might consume at most 200 watts of lighting (using conventional bulbs) per hour for about twelve hours a day. My consumption is thus about 17Kw per week (incidentally, my supplier charges be just 10p per Kwh, not over 13p quoted by CF). Assuming I make the 80% savings quoted by using unsuitable, hazardous light bulbs that make some people ill this means I will save about 13Kw of juice in a week.
Now, yesterday I was in a branch of a major department store. They had three sets of double doors, all wide open. Each opening was “protected” from the elements by the use of a “curtain” fan heater. I have looked at these things in the past and I know that they each consume between 18 and 25Kw of electricity per hour. So this place was using around 60Kw each hour essentially to heat up the street. Assuming the store is open a (conservative) sixty hours each week, they are consuming 3600Kw a week. No “EU directives” exist to stop this ridiculous waste of energy but I am forced into using unsuitable light bulbs to make energy savings that are cancelled out almost 300 times over by a single store.
The light bulb directive is a prime example of the EU using its might to force consumers into activities under the guise that they are somehow saving the planet. They would do better to issue an edict forcing stores to keep their doors shut in winter. Far less inconvenient, far more effective.
But that’s not really what the EU is about, is it?