Friday, May 15, 2026
ADVT 
National

Some Holiday Light Displays Can Hike Yuletide Costs, BC Hydro Warns

Darpan News Desk, 30 Nov, 2018 04:14 PM
    VANCOUVER — BC Hydro is warning homeowners who string up elaborate holiday lighting displays that those decorations can significantly boost power costs.
     
     
    A new report from the Crown utility says the outdoor lighting load plummeted about 40 per cent by 2011 as LED lights replaced incandescent bulbs, but a trend toward larger displays has increased the load by 15 per cent since then.
     
     
    Popular inflatable holiday decorations are among the worst offenders because Hydro says they are typically run day and night.
     
     
    The BC Hydro report finds nearly 60 per cent of households put up holiday lighting and one in five of those households uses at least eight strands of lights.
     
     
    Hydro also estimates that about one-third of lights still in use are energy-gobbling incandescents, and says if the infamous holiday display in the film National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation were incandescent, it would cost $4,700 to light.
     
     
    The report says that bill would drop to about $50, if the lights were LED and it urges Hydro customers to switch to the energy efficient version.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Feds Restarting Indigenous Talks Over Pipeline, Won't Appeal Court Decision

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said his government will follow the "blueprint" laid out by the Federal Court of Appeal in August, which said Ottawa had not properly consulted with Indigenous Peoples because it listened without trying to accommodate concerns.

    Feds Restarting Indigenous Talks Over Pipeline, Won't Appeal Court Decision

    Ontario Increases Hospital Funding By $90 Million To Address Overcrowding

    Ontario Increases Hospital Funding By $90 Million To Address Overcrowding
    The government will fund 1,100 hospital beds in total — including more than 640 new beds.

    Ontario Increases Hospital Funding By $90 Million To Address Overcrowding

    B.C.'s Kitimat LNG Deal Has John Horgan Juggling Greens, Liberals, Environmentalists

    B.C.'s Kitimat LNG Deal Has John Horgan Juggling Greens, Liberals, Environmentalists
    Horgan said LNG Canada's decision to build a $40 billion liquefied natural gas project in northern B.C. ranked on the historic scale of a "moon landing," emphasizing just how much the project means to an economically deprived region of the province.

    B.C.'s Kitimat LNG Deal Has John Horgan Juggling Greens, Liberals, Environmentalists

    Canada's Finance Minister Touts USMCA But Says Dairy, Steel Sectors Need Help

    Canada's Finance Minister Touts USMCA  But Says Dairy, Steel Sectors Need Help
    VANCOUVER — Finance Minister Bill Morneau says Canada's new trade deal will bring more economic stability, even as the government works to fairly compensate dairy farmers and deal with the dissatisfied steel and aluminum industry. 

    Canada's Finance Minister Touts USMCA But Says Dairy, Steel Sectors Need Help

    B.C. Introduces Poverty Reduction Plan To Cut Child Poverty By 50 Per Cent

    B.C. Introduces Poverty Reduction Plan To Cut Child Poverty By 50 Per Cent
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's government has introduced legislation aimed at reducing the provincial poverty rate by 25 per cent and chopping the child poverty rate in half over the next five years. 

    B.C. Introduces Poverty Reduction Plan To Cut Child Poverty By 50 Per Cent

    56-Year-Old Man William Munton Pleads Guilty To 7 Arsons That Terrorized Vernon

    A jury trial was set to begin on Monday for 56-year-old William Munton, instead he pleaded guilty to seven counts of arson in B.C. Supreme Court.

    56-Year-Old Man William Munton Pleads Guilty To 7 Arsons That Terrorized Vernon