Make This Old House My Homepage
Recycling Compact Fluorescent Lightbulbs
Sylvania compact flourescent for strip lights
Photo: Mark Weiss

Browse Electrical & Lighting Galleries:

How-To Video

Browse More

How to Choose a Carbon Monoxide Detector

In this how-to video, This Old House plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey examines various types of carbon-monoxide detectors

Advertisement

On Newsstands Now

In the Magazine
November - Refresh your rooms with color
boy on radiator kitchen sideboard painted accent wall colonial dining room dog bed ramp
Advertisement

Compact Fluorescents have come a long way—they last longer, burn brighter, and look more like regular incandescent bulbs than ever before. There's just one little problem—they contain mercury. So when your CFLs burn out, you'll need to dispose of them properly.

To ensure that even the smallest traces of mercury don't end up in our landfills and water supplies, some companies that sell or manufacture compact fluorescent bulbs are coming up with their own recycling programs. Some WalMart locations host occasional CFL collections. And Sylvania has partnered with Veolia Environmental Services to offer prepaid recycling kits. The kits come in two sizes: One holds 15 CFLs and costs about $15; the "community pail" holds 90 CFLs and costs about $80. You use included shipping labels to mail them back to Veolia, which separates and recycles the metal, glass, and mercury.

For information on CFL recycling programs in your area, go to lamprecycling.org.

Photo Gallery: Energy-Saving Bulbs
Sign Up for Our Free Newsletters

Add new comment

The rules: Keep it clean, and stay on the subject or we might delete your comment. If you see inappropriate language, e-mail us.

1000 characters remaining