When those in the lighting industry talk about the current sweet spot for light-emitting diodes, many tout the quick payback of outdoor lighting for cities or cold storage, as well as the increasingly compelling case for LEDs in retail and office environments. One of the next killer apps, however, is for a market just emerging from a smoke-filled cloud of nebulous legality: indoor marijuana crops. Way back in 2011, long before recreational pot was legal in a few states, indoor marijuana grow operations were costing the U.S. about $5 billion annually in power theft. Now, with legalized grow operations in an increasing number of states (whether for medical or recreational purposes), the sky is the limit when it comes to supplies for cultivating weed, which requires powerful lights and indoor irrigation systems. The best bet to cut power is to switch to LEDs, which not only use far less energy than high-intensity discharge lights, but which can also be tailored to the specific crop. The overall LED grow-light module market is expected to move from $395 million in 2013 to $3.6 billion by 2020, according to WinterGreen Research. That upward trend will largely be driven by weed. One LED startupp is targeting the legal (and perhaps indirectly, the not-so-legal) grow ops of individuals and businesses with lights that are tailored to help them get the most from their bud. The pace of change and the innovation in the next five years will be driven by marijuana because it’s such a high value crop and it’s growing so quickly