· Upstream rebates for basic Compact Fluorescent Lamps should be phased-out or significantly reduced;

· The existing residential lighting programs and the Lighting Market Transformation program should be unified into a new statewide Lighting Program consisting of four subprograms: (1) Lighting Market Transformation, (2) Emerging Lighting Technology,287 (3) Lighting Innovation,288 and (4) Primary Lighting;289

· Lighting measures should be consolidated for the residential and nonresidential sectors;

· The Lighting Market Transformation subprogram should continue its current activities but also serve as a coordination program that oversees the progression of new lighting measures from the proposed Emerging Lighting Technology subprogram to the Lighting Innovation and Primary Lighting subprograms; and

· Rebates for advanced lighting including light emitting diodes (LEDs), specialty Compact Fluorescent Lamps,290 efficient incandescent lamps, and dimmable linear fluorescent ballast products should be supported in the 2013-2014 portfolio. The proposal also suggests that rebates for general service screw base light emitting diode lamps should be provided only for products that meet a particular quality standard developed by the California Energy Commission. To maintain lower administration costs, the rebates are proposed to be applied upstream, although they may also be applied midstream for products typically purchased by lighting contractors.

The residential lighting industry will undergo a substantial transformation through the deployment of high-efficiency and high-performance lighting technologies supported by state and national code standards...The utilities will begin to...shift focus toward new lighting technologies and other innovative programs that focus on lasting energy savings ....305

285 D.09-09-047 at 140 -141.

286 Budgeted through the staff disposition of Advice Letter 3065-G-B/3562-E-B, dated September 17, 2010 and approved on October 21, 2010.

287 This subprogram would contain lighting measures that are currently supported in the Emerging Technology Program and would also support future emerging lighting technology measures. It would primarily develop small pilots and demonstration projects. As markets for measures are tested and demonstrated through this subprogram and become more mature, they would transition to the Lighting Innovation Program.

288 This subprogram would be designed as an intermediary step to foster markets for measures that are more mature than those in the Emerging Lighting Technology subprogram but less so than those in the Primary Lighting subprogram. (See next footnote). It would develop medium scale pilots and demonstration projects to identify measures that should be supported in the Primary Lighting subprogram.

289 The Staff Proposal originally called this the "Basic Lighting" subprogram. To avoid confusion with basic Compact Fluorescent Lamps, we will rename this the "Primary Lighting" subprogram.

290 Specialty Compact Fluorescent Lamps are mainly Compact Fluorescent Lamps not included in the 2010-2012 Basic Compact Fluorescent Lamps lighting program.

291 DRA Comments on Programmatic Guidance Ruling at 7.

292 DRA Comments on Phase IV Scoping Memo at 1-2.

293 SCE Comments on Phase IV Scoping Memo at 4.

294 City and County of San Francisco Comments on Phase IV Scoping Memo at 2.

295 NRDC Comments on Phase IV Scoping Memo at 2.

296 Synergy Companies Comments on Phase IV Scoping Memo at 3-4.

297 PG&E Comments on Programmatic Guidance Ruling at 13.

298 SDG&E and SoCalGas Comments on Programmatic Guidance Ruling at 11.

299 Strategic Plan at 11.

300 These rebates are applied upstream to minimize administration costs.

301 DRA Comments on Programmatic Guidance Ruling at 7.

302 DRA Comments on Programmatic Guidance Ruling, Appendix A at 5.

303 SDG&E and SoCalGas Comments on Programmatic Guidance Ruling at 10.

304 Id.

305 Strategic Plan at 11.

306 These rebates are applied upstream to minimize administration costs, however the rebates may also be applied midstream for products typically purchased by lighting contractors.

307 SDG&E and SoCalGas Comments on Programmatic Guidance Ruling at 10.

308 Strategic Plan at 99.

309 PG&E Comments on Programmatic Guidance Ruling at 12-13.

310 DRA Comments on Programmatic Guidance Ruling at 7-9.

311 WEM Comments on Programmatic Guidance Ruling at 10.

312 SDG&E and SoCalGas Comments on Programmatic Guidance Ruling at 10.

313 DRA Comments on Programmatic Guidance Ruling at 3.

314 A program of the U.S. DOE, the Lighting Facts® label provides detailed information for consumers, including luminaire light output, efficacy (lumens per watt), measured power (watts), correlated color temperature, and color rendering index. http://www.lightingfacts.com.

315 DRA Comments on Programmatic Guidance Ruling at 3.

316 TURN Comments on Programmatic Guidance Ruling at 8.

317 These rebates may also be applied midstream for products typically purchased by lighting contractors.

318 These rebates may also be applied midstream for products typically purchased by lighting contractors.

319 As of February 2, 2012, the U.S. Department of Energy Lighting Facts® label was provided on 4339 products. http://www.lightingfacts.com.

320 D.09-09-047 at 126.

321 These rebates may also be applied midstream for products typically purchased by lighting contractors.

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