Light Up The World Foundation

Represented by Dr. Dave Irvine-Halliday, Founder and Director
ECE, University of Calgary

While visiting Nepal in 1997, Dr. Dave Irvine-Halliday was dismayed at the living conditions of villagers whose only source of light after sunset was that produced by dangerous kerosene lamps. He was especially concerned about the children who had to work all day and whose only opportunity to study was by kerosene light, with the risk of unhealthy fumes and fire.

Dr. Irvine-Halliday returned to Calgary with a vision to use his background in photonics to change the lives of the two billion people worldwide who essentially live in darkness after the sun goes down because they have no access to electricity. His solution was to apply White Light Emitting Diode (WLED) technology to provide affordable, safe and environmentally friendly home lighting powered by renewable sources. WLED, a solid-state lighting (SSL) technology, has enormous cost and efficiency advantages over conventional lighting. WLED lamps can light an entire village with less energy than that used by a conventional 100-Watt light bulb. Used six hours a day, WLEDs will last more than 40 years.

The Light Up the World (LUTW) Foundation was formed to accelerate the adaptation of this technology around the world. The chief goal of the Calgary-based foundation is to replace fuel-based lighting with SSL technologies to improve the lives of those without access to electricity, and to reduce impact on the environment.  LUTW began by testing WLED lamps in remote Himalayan villages. It has since illuminated the lives of more than 20,000 people in over a dozen countries, including Sri Lanka, India, Pakistan, Guatemala, and Dominican Republic, as well as in a remote First Nation community in British Columbia.