Assume I live in a location where at any time of day and any time of year, I need to heat my house. Assume further that I have a room with no windows. In this case, does it make sense for me to buy efficient light bulbs, considering that any inefficiency in converting electricity to visible light simply leads to more heat being added to the room, which in turn, results in less heat being output by the heater to maintain constant room temperature.
Although these are somewhat idealized conditions, I don't think they are too far off from being realistic. For example, say you live near the arctic circle, it might be smart not to have many windows due to heat loss, and it seems reasonable that in such a climate, heating will be required at all times of the day and year. Assuming I haven't missed something, it seems to me, somewhat unintuitively, that buying efficient light bulbs is not a logical thing to do. Is this the case?
Electricity is already expensive (my electric bill went up this summer during the heatwave). Now your air conditioner is trying to compensate for the incandescent lights.
So yeah inefficient lights are generally more expensive.
However, if you have a seasonal depression or some other mood disorder, then you might want to buy lights that look a lot like natural sunlight.
At that point it is not about physics or economics but about your preferred lifestyle.
https://blogs.edf.org/climate411/2007/10/09/heating_with_ics/
– Leonid Sep 07 '22 at 02:01