Tinkerdreams
Disney Princess
- Joined
- Sep 8, 2007
- Messages
- 1,120
They used to called lights of winter they were stopped in 2009 I believe.
Well they need to bring them back. It's a huge park and the tree just isn't enough!!
They used to called lights of winter they were stopped in 2009 I believe.
They used to called lights of winter they were stopped in 2009 I believe.
I'm hoping that Disney has a similar light display in Epcot. We were there last week and not for anything but the Christmas decorations at Epcot were lacking to say the least.
Didn't Disney change to LED lights? These are not the same lights that were originally donated to them.
Yep. Vast majority of my own display is now LED. I haven't blown any fuses this year so farYes...awhile ago
Led lights consumer 1/7th power of incandescent...they pay for themselves almost immediately
Be still my heartbut the Siemens PLC's and Automation equipment that run the show belong to WDW and can be deployed anywhere, including a revamped Lights of Winter.
This is exactly it.It just doesn't make good business sense to have it at DS, where there's no charge to enter. If it returns, you can bet it'll be at a park...
I highly doubt the Osborne lights leaving has anything whatsoever to do with Disney wanting to save money on their electricity bill. If that was the reason the would've stopped the show 10 years ago.As part of their green initiative, WDW is looking to be more responsible in their energy usage and impact to the environment. The Osborne Lights show (even the LED version) is an energy waster. You've got to remember that the power plants that serve WDW are at Crystal River. Since the nuclear plant shut down, the power coming from Crystal River is all coal fired and is very dirty. They haven't even yet begun to build a gas fired power plant at Crystal River. It makes sense to shut down the Osborne Lights to minimize the environmental impact.
Actually that's not the case. You see the nuclear reactor at Crystal River supplied power from 1977 until 2009 when it had to be shut down due to an upgrade. But during that process (which was spread over many years) they discovered serious problems with the plant and projected it would take until 2014 to come back online.I highly doubt the Osborne lights leaving has anything whatsoever to do with Disney wanting to save money on their electricity bill. If that was the reason the would've stopped the show 10 years ago.
We just came back from our Thanksgiving trip and the day we went to DHS to see the Osborne lights I had to stop at guest relations to get an AP card, since I forgot mine. While the CM was working on the computer, we were talking about the lights and I said it's very sad that this is the last year we will see them. See then said that "well it may not be", she said that she has heard a lot of talk about keeping them and trying to find a new location for them, maybe even Disney Springs. Just passing on the scuttlebutt![]()
I'm sorry but what is it with you being against these Christmas lights? You are the first person I have ever seen make this claim that Disney is getting rid of them to save money and save themselves from causing pollution. I truly believe if that was the case they would've stopped them years ago. You are aware Disney is beginning a massive construction project in DHS in January right? That must have absolutely nothing to do with them getting rid of the lights then.Actually that's not the case. You see the nuclear reactor at Crystal River supplied power from 1977 until 2009 when it had to be shut down due to an upgrade. But during that process (which was spread over many years) they discovered serious problems with the plant and projected it would take until 2014 to come back online.
That turned out to be a lie and in 2013 they announced that the nuclear plant would be permanently shut down. Since 2009 the Crystal River Plant has burned nothing but coal to generate electricity. Suffice it to say, Disney was not happy. Every time that WDW monorail runs or the Osborne Lights glow, thousands of tons of sulfur dioxide (S02), nitrogen oxides (N0x) and particulate matter pollute the air. Also other pollutants such as mercury, lead, cadmium and other heavy metals are produced.
Disney wants more than to save money. They don't want to project the image of being an environmental villain. WDW has a very aggressive environmental program and they seek to reduce power consumption and wastefulness as much as possible. Huge Christmas light displays waste energy and cause unnecessary pollution.
It's up to everyone to do their part to help reduce power consumption.
Suffice it to say, Disney was not happy.
Every time that WDW monorail runs or the Osborne Lights glow, thousands of tons of sulfur dioxide (S02), nitrogen oxides (N0x) and particulate matter pollute the air. Also other pollutants such as mercury, lead, cadmium and other heavy metals are produced.
Disney wants more than to save money. They don't want to project the image of being an environmental villain. WDW has a very aggressive environmental program and they seek to reduce power consumption and wastefulness as much as possible. Huge Christmas light displays waste energy and cause unnecessary pollution.
It's up to everyone to do their part to help reduce power consumption.
What better source than the DIS to make the point:Please provide a reference for the statement that "Disney was not happy".
That's an interesting theory, but that's not how the US power grid works. It is a grid. Power comes from all manner of places on the grid. It is not strictly correct to say that all the power for Disney comes from Crystal River. It comes from many places, all over Florida and beyond.
Also, if Disney is so concerned about lighting and power wastage, why has every fixture in the World not been changed over to an LED one? They pay for themselves almost immediately (as lockedout pointed out above).
Finally, the amount of power that Osbourne consumes is literally a drop in the bucket compared to the total power required by just HS without it, let alone the entire World.
FEATURED, JASON GARCIA, NEWS BY JASON GARCIA ON MARCH 25, 2010 AT 8:50 AM
Problems at a nuclear power plant on Floridas Gulf coast have created a bit of a headache for Walt Disney World.
Progress Energys nuclear plant in Crystal River has been shut down since late last year, after workers in the midst of a maintenance project discovered a crack in the containment wall that surrounds the facilitys reactor building
That has in turn left Disney Worlds semi-autonomous government, the Reedy Creek Improvement District, scrambling. About 10 percent of the districts power is generated at the nuclear plant, which is about 100 miles northwest of Disney World.
Reedy Creek utility officials say they expect the prolonged shutdown, which they have been told is likely to last until July, will cost the district between $500,000 and $700,000 out of an annual power-buying budget of about $100 million. Though Progress says it has offered to sell customers energy from its other (more expensive) generation sources to make up for the nuclear shortfall, Reedy Creek says it is opting instead to plug the gap through a combination of surplus power from its own generator facility, conservation and additional purchases through existing contracts with other utilities, such as TECO Energy of Tampa.