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Like many utility operations, there are revenues and costs for street
lighting. As the economic climate has generated more awareness of these
revenues and costs, industry groups and manufacturers have responded.
In particular, the IES has modified its photocontrol selection guide.
It now includes a section on economics. The chart below summarizes some
of the material in the IES Guide to Selection of Photocontrols, DG-13.
| REVENUES |
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#Tariff |
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#Contracts |
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| COSTS |
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# Initial Purchase Price |
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#Energy Factors |
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P
Types and Wattages of Lamps |
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P
Enerpgy Consumed by Photocontrol |
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P
Burning Hours: Latitude |
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Control ON/OFF |
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Drift |
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Control orientation |
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Dayburners |
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Atmosphereic conditions |
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#Maintenance Costs |
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P
Material Costs |
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P
Labor, Equipment, Overhead |
2.1 Revenues
In the United States, the primary source of revenues for utility street
lighting is provided by the state tariff. Recently, some utilities are
getting new contract revenue from new product offerings, sometimes through
an unregulated subsidiary. Some portion of the customer's rate per kilowatt
hour reimburses a utility for street lighting. Most often costs to be
recovered are calculated based on an assumed number of hours (almost always
between 3,700 and 4,300 hours per year; most often between 4,000 hours
and 4,200 hours per year). The budget calculations account for the street
light population by lamp type, wattages and utilities unmetered cost to
provide the energy.
The biggest variable in revenue calculations is the assumption on burning
hours. Within continental US and Canada, lowest practical burning hours
will be between 4,120 hours and 4,180 hours. If your tariff hours are
not in synch with your actual burning hours, you aren't getting paid for
the service you deliver. You probably cannot do anything about this in
the short term but it's always useful to know where one stands in any
negotiation. It's worth asking your rate people.
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