Torrance, Calif., April 12, 2010 — Immediately after being sworn in to
the U.S. House of Representatives from California’s 32nd District in July
2009, Congresswoman Judy Chu wasted no time in getting to work on behalf of her
constituents. Her first task on Capitol Hill was voting on a number of important
environmental bills.
It is this personal commitment to ecological issues and concern for America’s
energy future that led Dr. Chu to confer with executives and engineers of solid-state
lighting pioneer LEDtronics, Inc., to discuss and gain some insight into the
technological advances in light-emitting diodes (LED) and the tremendous contributions
LED lighting applications might bring to energy conservation on a national
level.
LEDtronics hosted the roundtable meeting in its Torrance headquarters on April
6.
During the two-hour gathering, President and CEO Pervaiz Lodhie and other
company executives explained the LED technology’s latest innovations
and its potential to become a major contributor not only to energy efficiency
but also to reducing greenhouse gases and the creation of green jobs. “The
solid-state lighting and solar energy industries are the top job creators in
the U.S. today,” said Lodhie. “In addition, these cutting-edge
technologies spur innovation, boost domestic manufacturing and re-affirm the
U.S. as the leader in technological ingenuity around the world,” he added.
Rep. Chou was interested in learning that Light Emitting Diodes, which use
a similar technology as computer chips, are tiny, energy-efficient, long-lasting
(10 times as long as compact fluorescents), durable, mercury-free and white-bright
light generating sources that produce only negligible heat and are perfectly
suited to be used with alternative energy sources like solar and wind. Until
recently, they were limited to single-bulb use in applications such as instrument
panels, electronics, pen lights and, more recently, strings of indoor and outdoor
Christmas lights. Manufacturers such as LEDtronics have expanded LED applications
by clustering the small bulbs, first as battery-powered items such as flashlights
and headlamps, and nowadays available with standard bases which fit common
household light fixtures. Analysts predict that by the end of the decade, LEDs
will be the dominant source for commercial and residential lighting.
Gary Peterson, National Sales Manager, described some of the wide-encompassing
LEDtronics projects around the world, from a group of street lights abutting
a local public school to the South Capitol Street Bridge in Washington, D.C.,
that Rep. Chou traverses every day to a U.S. Army garrison in South Korea to
turtle-friendly boulevard lights in Florida.
“It’s amazing how many lighting problems you have solved,” remarked
Rep. Chou, the first Chinese American woman elected to the U. S. Congress.
Mr. Lodhie thanked the congresswoman for taking time away from her busy schedule
to learn about LEDs, and expressed the company’s readiness in contributing
in any way to the national campaign for energy efficiency. “Considering
the number of major energy-saving LED bulbs we supply to the US industry, we
are helping save 2-3 megawatts of energy each year, over and above the continued
energy savings of the past 26 years,” he said. “And we will continue
to be in the forefront of those efforts.”
Dr. Judy Chu represents a swath of suburban cities east of Los Angeles in
the U.S. Congress. She is on the House Education and Labor Committee and has
also been assigned to the House Judiciary and Government Oversight Committees.
Dr. Chu served three terms as a California State Assembly Member for the 49th
District in the West San Gabriel Valley from 2001 to 2006, before she was elected
to the California State Board of Equalization in 2006. Prior to the State Assembly,
Dr. Chu served on the Monterey Park City Council for 13 years, and served as
Mayor three times.
Since 1983 when it was founded, LEDtronics has been a technological leader
in designing, manufacturing and packaging state-of-the-art LEDs to meet the
world’s constantly changing lighting needs. Its inventive product line
encompasses an array of direct incandescent lamp replacement LEDs, low-cost
snap-in and relampable panel-mount LEDs, high intensity sunlight-visible discrete
LEDs, PCB LEDs, circuit board status indicators, surface-mount diodes SMT LEDs,
full-spectrum rainbow RGB LEDs and Infrared (IR) LEDs.