Team is happy to takeadimview of lighting work
THE LARGEST street lighting replacement programme in the country had to be tailored in North Yorkshire to preserve the county’s dark skies and ensure that a multi-million pound tourism boom is not undermined.
North Yorkshire County Council’s engineers have completed the ambitious programme to replace 50,400 street lights with energysaving LED lamps in an environmentally-friendly push to slash the authority’s carbon dioxide emissions.
The scheme has introduced specific technology with dimmer lighting in North Yorkshire’s two National Parks, which were officially designated as International Dark Sky Reserves in December.
Paul Gilmore, the council’s electrical engineering manager who leads the street lighting team, is himself a keen amateur astronomer.
He said: “I have spent the last 30 years as a street lighting engineer putting lights in, and now I am spending my time turning them off or dimming them or making them less bright.
“But my team buys into that. The more we understand about the impact
of artificial light, the more it makes sense.”
The street lighting project was completed in three years instead of an original five-year timescale. It was also due to cost nearly £13m but through procurement, costs have been driven down to just over £8m.
With capital costs reduced by more than £4m and as energy and maintenance savings of £1.285m are projected from 2021/2022, the anticipated payback of the scheme has dropped from over 12 years to under eight years.
The project was fundamental to the Yorkshire Dales and North York Moors National Parks achieving International Dark Sky Reserve status. Engineers replaced lights in the National Parks with warmer tone LED lamps rather than the cooler tone technology that was installed elsewhere.
The North York Moors National Park Authority’s head of polyhalite projects, Mike Hawtin, said: “Part of my job is to preserve and improve tranquillity in the National Park, and dark skies are part of that and it benefits the visitor economy as well as benefiting wildlife.
“We attract people into the National Parks in the depths of winter for the Dark Skies Festival with all the knock-on income from accommodation and hospitality bookings.
“But reduced light pollution and dark skies status is also of benefit to creatures like bats, birds and moths, as it protects their foraging, mating and pollinating behaviour.”
Official figures have shown that the tourism industry in Flagstaff, Arizona, which was the first location in the world to be given a dark skies designation in 2001, supports more than 8,000 jobs and is worth $500m to the local economy.