Low-End Capacity Collapse: A Long-Overdue Industry Purge
Root Cause: Ailing Low-End Manufacturing Model
OEM Dependency Dilemma: Chinese LED lighting manufacturers have long been entrenched at the bottom of the global value chain, relying heavily on OEM/ODM models for Western brands like Signify and OSRAM. Although China accounts for 75.4% of global LED lighting exports, the profit margins remain extremely slim. For instance, an LED downlight shipped to Europe is priced at only $2–3 FOB, while the same product retails for $20–30 in Western markets—a stark value disparity.
Dual Carbon Strategy: A Policy Spotlight on the High Ground
Industrial Energy-Saving Upgrades: A Trillion-Yuan Rigid Demand Market
Policy-Driven Growth:
The Carbon Peaking Implementation Plan for Urban and Rural Construction mandates that by 2030, over 80% of lighting used must be high-efficiency LED. In industrial sectors, the phase-out of metal halide and high-pressure sodium lamps is accelerating. China’s industrial lighting currently consumes over 300 billion kWh annually. Full LED replacement could save power equivalent to 1.5 times the output of the Three Gorges Dam each year.
Technology Moat:
Industrial lighting must perform in harsh environments—requiring explosion-proof, waterproof, corrosion-resistant, and extreme-temperature (-40°C to 85°C) capabilities. This pushes enterprises to innovate in thermal management, secondary optics, and robust power systems, building strong technical barriers to entry.
Smart City Infrastructure: The Green Revolution Inside Lamp Poles
From June to July 2025, over ¥5 billion worth of urban lighting projects have been launched across China, with smart light poles emerging as a key infrastructure. For instance, Suzhou High-Tech Zone invested ¥500 million to install 3,240 smart poles integrating EV chargers, environmental sensors, and emergency call buttons. Neijiang City allocated ¥16 million to upgrade aging lighting facilities for carbon reduction. These efforts align with the 14th Five-Year National Urban Infrastructure Development Plan, which calls for “green lighting development and widespread adoption of smart lamp poles.” Through integrated solar systems, energy use is cut by 60%, with smart dimming achieving an additional 30% savings—making it a model for low-carbon urban upgrades.
Circular Economy: A Green Leap from Products to Materials
Material Revolution:
LEDVANCE, under MLS Co., uses post-consumer recycled (PCR) plastics in LED bulb production—cutting carbon footprint by 30%, improving luminous efficacy by 15%, and reducing plastic usage by 500 tons annually.
Model Innovation:
Signify has launched a “Lighting-as-a-Service” (LaaS) model, incorporating 3D-printed luminaires to reduce carbon emissions by 47% and slash maintenance costs by 60%, accelerating the shift to green lighting business solutions.
Portrait of the Game Changers: The Rise of Tech-Driven and Scenario-Oriented Players
Technology-Driven Pioneers: Tackling the High Ground of Industrial and Automotive Standards
Industrial Lighting Breakthroughs:
Companies like Ledsun and Lianyuu are partnering with global brands to develop explosion-proof mining lamps, achieving breakthroughs such as 100,000-hour lifespans, and targeting the massive global market for industrial lighting replacements.
Automotive-Grade Positioning:
With new energy vehicle (NEV) penetration exceeding 30%, LED headlights have evolved from safety components to intelligent interactive systems. A Changzhou-based company developed DLP projection headlights for the NIO ET9, priced over 10,000 RMB per unit. By aligning closely with carmakers and sharing patent pools, they sidestep technology blockades.
Scenario-Based Innovators: Shifting from Selling Fixtures to Selling Light Environments
Empowering the Night Economy:
NVC Lighting transformed the lighting environment of Chongqing’s Jiefangbei commercial district with dynamic lighting, extending business hours until 2 a.m. and boosting per-square-meter consumption by 40%. Its “Cultural Narrative Lighting System” provides light-and-shadow operations for Xi’an’s Datang Everbright City, increasing per-customer spending by 50%.
Healthy Light Formulations:
Opple Lighting developed an “Emotional Lighting Formula” system, adjusting color temperature and light spectrum to extend customer dwell time by 15% and improve purchase conversion rates by 9%.
Policy Leverage: How to Break Through the Last Mile?
Despite a clear direction, the industry’s upgrade still faces three key obstacles:
Breaking Through Requires a Three-Pronged Strategy:
Conclusion: Between Lights Off and Lights On