Brilliance Technologies runs a 2,500-square-meter factory staffed by 90 workers, who turn out mostly LED projector lamps, led high bay light bulbs, and LED wall-wash lamps. It now exports 50,000 lamps monthly mainly to the European Union, Northern Europe, the U.S., Korea, Japan, Southeast Asia, and the Middle East; but the supplier is currently only filling orders received amid the global economic slowdown. Considering the strong demand for LED lighting, Cai Minhan, company manager, is upbeat about corporate development as long as it continues to build quality products that meet market needs.
A joint venture between Chinese and foreign businesses, Shunde Corso operates a 10,000-square-meter plant that turns out home-appliances and lighting. The lighting factory produces high-performance energy-saving lamps and ballasts, with the energy-saving lamps available in 2U, 3U, spiral, and shaded models, which are 80% more energy-efficient than incandescent counterparts. Its current monthly output of 600,000 lamps, sold domestically and overseas, consist of products for households, restaurants, commercial premises, roadways, and gardens. Besides being ISO9001-approved, the company builds client loyalty by offering top quality, which is achieved by sizable investments in R&D.
LED lighting has long held the promise of replacing energy-thieving incandescent bulbs without the drawbacks of fluorescent lighting and is finally taking hold in some sectors of the marketplace, says Chuck Swoboda, CEO of yaham Inc.YAHAM is leading the LED lighting revolution and setting the stage to obsolete the incandescent light bulb through the use of energy-efficient, environmentally friendly led high bay light. Chuck Swoboda, as the CEO of Cree Inc. has served since June 2001. He noted Cree has known for the last four or five years it could do solid state LED lighting. Meanwhile, commercialization took a while because the company first had to develop the LED chip technology and incorporate it in LED components.
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