Holding out on trying an LED light bulb until the price comes down? Best Buy is waiting for you.
The Richfield-based electronics retailer quietly introduced 40- and 60-watt equivalent LED bulbs late last year for $15 and $18, but a subsidy from Xcel Energy will drop the prices to $9.99 and $10.49 in most Twin Cities stores starting Sunday.
"Our goal was to sell LED bulbs for under $10," said Mike Dahnert, global product manager at Best Buy. "We think that's the magic price point."
In 2012, Best Buy entered into a license agreement with local inventor Dave Carroll to sell his now patented bulb that looks like an incandescent. Like many retailers, the company initially climbed aboard the LED bandwagon because the bulbs offer a longer life span of 10 to 20 years and energy savings of 70 to 80 percent. Once retail prices sank below $20 per bulb, more jumped on.
Best Buy, which sells the bulbs under its private-label Insignia brand, waited to market the bulbs until they qualified for Energy Star designation and utility subsidies. With both in hand, the company will soon begin promoting the bulbs more aggressively, Dahnert said.
The move comes at a time when the LED market could use a ray of hope. In 2012, LED made up only 2.5 percent of lighting products sold, including residential, municipal and commercial sources, according to the Department of Energy (DOE). Since LED came on the mass market in 2009, consumers have had concerns about cost and quality, said James Brodrick, lighting program manager of the Building Technologies Office at the DOE. "They're hesitant to try something new," he said.
Blame the compact fluorescent. Despite massive PR campaigns from utilities about CFLs' energy savings that started around 2005, consumers were turned off by the bulbs' hazardous materials and overstated life spans. Their cool blue light, slow warm-up, and "pig tail" shape also failed to spark consumers' interest.
"CFLs' success never materialized because they didn't deliver what consumers wanted — good color, long life and dimmability," said Michael Siminovitch, director of the California Lighting Technology Center at the University of California, Davis. "We learned that people buy service, not energy savings."