Skip to main content

Vejdirektoratet finishes €18.75 million LED update

The Danish Road Directorate, Vejdirektoratet, said lower operating costs of LED highway lights mean the return on investment could be only six years.
By David Arminas May 5, 2025 Read time: 2 mins
LED lights and reduced lighting levels is helping the Danish Road Directorate save money and energy (image courtesy Vejdirektoratet, the Danish Road Directorate)

The Danish Road Directorate, Vejdirektoratet, has completed its largest lighting project, replacement of 23,000 lamps on the national road network with modern LED lamps.

Vejdirektoratet also said it has removed lighting on motorway sections where it was deemed not essential. Overall, the project means that energy consumption for road lighting has been reduced by about 65%, according to Thomas Danielsen, Denmark’s transport minister.

Total investment is about €18.75 million. However, the lower operating costs mean that the investment is expected to be paid back in just under six years. At night, the light is automatically reduced to half the previous level in many places to save energy, where there is no need for much brighter light.

Last December, the directorate published an updated version of the Danish Road Lighting Handbook - one of the most used Danish standards to meet the Danish Road Lighting Guidelines and which is heavily adopted for state roads, municipalities and road infrastructure.

The updated handbook introduces three new terms and concepts concerning light pollution, good light and biodiversity. These are “environmental zones”, “G-index” and “mDER (Melanopic Daylight Efficacy Ratio)”.  

Last May 2024, the Danish Road Directorate published the report “The Impact of Lighting on Animals, Plants and Humans.” The report helped form the basis for the measures the directorate incorporated into the updated road lighting handbook.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • The March of the Urban Low-emission Zone
    April 17, 2018
    Europe’s political patchwork is getting a low-emission zone overlap, according to Malcolm Kent* By now, pretty much everybody in the industry will be aware of the Low Emission Zone in London, UK. But awareness of similar European zones about to start or expand might be more patchy. The background to all of these schemes is the problem of air quality, particularly European Union rules setting limits on acceptable pollution levels. It was found some years ago that several member states’ cities, including
  • €554 million tunnel for Aarhus, Denmark
    November 19, 2024
    A €554 million tunnel is planned for Aarhus in Denmark.
  • Lighting innovations boosting brightness, cutting costs
    January 27, 2014
    CU Phosco’s new P850 LED main road lantern has just seen its first major deployment – between Junctions 16 and 17 of the A55, a strategic road which skirts the North Wales coastline – Jason Barnes reports The A55 is a grade-separated dual carriageway also known as the North Wales Expressway. Some 139km long, it originally ran from Chester to Bangor but was extended across the Isle of Anglesey into Holyhead Docks in 2001 under a project part-funded by the European Union.
  • LEDs shed new light on cost savings according to Harvard Technology
    October 26, 2016
    Russell Fletcher* from global lighting solutions provider Harvard Technology explains how LEDs and wireless controls are changing the lighting industry. The lighting controls market is set to double by 2024, according to Navigant Research, a US-based global market research and consulting team that analyses clean technology markets. The driver is technological advancements which bring impressive results through retrofitting combined LED and wireless control systems.