Saturday 5 October 2024
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Nottingham

New LED traffic lights for 60 Nottingham city road junctions

£631,000 from the Government’s Department for Transport has allowed work start
soon to upgrade Nottingham’s traffic signals to energy-efficient LED lights.

The new lights are instead of the current halogen lamps. The council will use the funding to boost reliability and reduce faults to provide a safer experience for motorists as well as longer-term maintenance savings.

Over the next 18 months, approximately 60 junctions and 70 crossings will be kitted
out with new equipment across all areas of the city. Over 50% of traffic lights are
already upgraded to the new LED style.

The main advantages of LEDs over halogen lamps are that they generate the same
light output with considerably less energy usage and a greatly extended lifespan.

Halogen lamps last for approximately 1000 – 2000 hours whereas LED lamps can last
up to 80,000 hours, which is a significant upgrade.

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Due to the longer life spans of the LEDs, there will be a reduced level of lamp failures which will help ensure clarity for motorists when approaching signals. Replacing the lights with LEDs will also provide cost savings to the council due to the reduced energy required.

 

In 2022 Nottingham City Council secured a grant for £7m from the Government’s
Levelling Up Fund to upgrade street lights in all the city’s wards with new, energy-
efficient LEDs. As part of this ambitious project, subway lighting and signage lights
were also upgraded. LEDs were installed ward by ward until they were all completed
in March 2024.

Nottingham City Council Leader and Executive Member for Strategic Regeneration, Transport and Communications, Councillor Neghat Khan said:

“Ensuring our traffic lights are upgraded and working well will help keep our city
moving and make Nottingham’s roads safer for everyone.

“These new lights will also have a positive impact on our environment and local air quality, reducing congestion and requiring less energy to operate, contributing towards our target of becoming carbon neutral by 2028.”

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