After a pilot project last year proved to be a big hit with the public, Dörentrup's council has decided to roll out the scheme for the whole village, home to 9,000 people. Utility company Lemgo says the scheme will cut down Dörentrup's carbon-dioxide emissions by around 12 tons each year compared with leaving the streetlights on all night. "We found out that on each stretch of road, people only switch on the lights up to three times each night," explains Frank Bräuer, project leader at Lemgo. "That's why this system works in villages or the outskirts of a town where residents don't need the lights burning all night." But Dial4Light won't work for everyone, he admits: "It wouldn't be suitable for a big city like New York or London, where there's a lot going on at night."
-
- groups:
- Tech, News, Green, World News
-
-
- singrrr
- added this
-
@vijay_dev on twitter says "Germany's Green Idea:"
-
-
- twitterbot
- 5 months ago
-
-
god, the hell we'd go through from the screaming paranoid radical right makes this notion unworkable in most of america.
-
I don't see why republicans would balk at this idea, other than the fact that it would cost the state money. But then again, this could end up saving a lot of money too. It really depends on what your local government wants to do.
This is a really good idea though. I'd support it if my city wanted to try it.
-
-
- crispyfritters
- 5 months ago
-






