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  2. Mercury

What are the Connections between Mercury and CFLs?

Using CFLs (and other fluorescent bulbs) instead of incandescent bulbs reduces the amount of mercury released into the environment

  • Mercury is found in many rocks, including coal. When coal is burned at a utility power plant to produce electricity, mercury is released into the environment.
  • In the United States, burning coal at power plants results in a little more than 40% of all mercury emissions from man-made sources (Source: Section 2.7 of the 2014 National Emissions Inventory, version 1 (December 2016) of the Technical Support Document (PDF)).
  • Using energy-saving CFLs instead of incandescent bulbs reduces demand for electricity, which in turn reduces the amount of coal burned by power plants, which reduces emissions of mercury when the coal is burned.
  • LED bulbs are more efficient and versatile than either CFLs or incandescent bulbs, and last longer. Learn more about LED bulbs.

CFLs contain very small amounts of mercury

  • Small amounts of mercury can be released into the environment when CFLs break, or if they are improperly disposed of at the end of their useful lives.
  • Mercury, an essential part of CFLs, allows a bulb to be an efficient light source.
  • On average, CFLs contain about four milligrams of mercury sealed within the glass tubing. By comparison, older thermometers contain about 500 milligrams of mercury – an amount equal to the mercury in more than 100 CFLs.
  • Manufacturers of fluorescent lighting products are working to reduce the amount of mercury content in CFLs.
  • No mercury is released when the bulbs are intact (i.e., not broken) or in use, but mercury vapor and very small beads of mercury can be released when a CFL is broken.

Related Information on CFLs

From EPA.gov:

  • Main CFLs page
  • Recommended steps to clean up and dispose of broken CFL bulbs
  • Recycling and disposal of CFLs after they burn out

From EnergyStar.gov:

  • Learn about Energy Star CFLs and light bulbs
  • Frequent questions about CFLs 
  • What is a CFL?
  • CFLs and mercury

From other sources:

  • Concerned about Mercury in Energy-Saving Lamps? (PDF)-- from the European Commission Health and Consumers Scientific Committees

Related Information on Mercury

  • Frequent questions about mercury
  • Mercury use in lighting (PDF) and in other consumer products

Mercury

  • Basic Information
  • How People are Exposed
  • Health Effects
  • What EPA is Doing
  • What You Can Do
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    • TSCA Inventory Reporting Rule
  • Guidelines for Eating Fish
  • Products that Contain Mercury
  • Broken Bulbs
  • Broken Thermometers
  • Science and Research Resources
  • En español
Contact Us about Mercury
Contact Us to ask a question, provide feedback, or report a problem.
Last updated on March 6, 2025
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