The company's Adam Hicks (pictured) warned: "The current standards for the specification of industrial lighting, BS EN 12464-1 and 12464-2, determine the level of illumination required to safely and successfully undertake specific tasks within the workplace.
"Yet, despite it being compulsory for facilities managers to meet BS EN standards, many within the industry are failing to do so. However, the most prevalent cause of non-compliance is not in fact poor quality equipment – although this will of course affect system performance if used – but actually failing to maintain the system in line with the manufacturer's recommendations."
He added: "We have found that there is a distinct lack of awareness among many maintenance professionals and facilities managers about the level of routine cleaning and maintenance required to not only comply with BS EN standards, but maximise the overall efficiency of the lighting system."
Non-compliance starts when a lighting system continues to be used beyond the manufacturer's specification, according to Eriks UK. "Most schemes are designed to comply with BS EN standards up to the point where bulk lamp change is required. For example, if a manufacturer states lamps should be changed every 16,000 hours, for a plant operating 24/7 that is roughly every two years.
"Beyond the two year point the scheme is non-compliant, providing insufficient light as well as having a major impact on energy consumption, and therefore bills."
Hicks added: "The real problem is that the level of re-lamping, cleaning and maintenance required by manufacturers is just not occurring, often due to the common location of industrial lighting in difficult-to-access areas. Therefore it is very rare that fittings are properly cleaned and maintained, and as a result lamps are only changed once they stop working."
Ericks said one of the most effective ways of extending the lifespan of an industrial lighting system was to invest in modern lighting technologies, principally LEDs.