The Borneo Post

Making the world hotter: India’s expected AC explosion

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BEHROR, India: Ratan Kumar once battled India’s brutal summers with damp bedsheets and midnight baths. Now he is among millions upon millions of Indians using air conditioni­ng – helping make the world hotter still.

With India’s AC market expected to explode from 30 million to a billion units by 2050, the world’s second-most populous country could become the planet’s top user of electricit­y for cooling.

India is already the number three spewer of greenhouse gases, burning through 800 million tonnes of coal every year – and the predicted AC boom could mean the country would have to triple its electricit­y production to meet demand, experts say.

But for the hundreds of millions of Indians enduring scorching, even deadly, summers, the air conditione­rs are a godsend.

“Summers make our life miserable,” said Kumar, a 48year- old laundryman earning US$ 225 a month who this year installed an AC unit in his two-room house in the town of Behror in the baking-hot desert state of Rajasthan.

“Sleeping for few hours is a struggle after a day’s hard work,” the father- of-two told AFP, running a hot iron over crumpled clothes. “I am not rich but we all aspire to a comfortabl­e life.”

Vast swathes of India endure a gruelling four-month long summer, and the mercury has been inching ever higher in recent years.

In 2016, the Earth’s hottest on record, temperatur­es in the Indian town of Phalodi soared to 51 degrees Celsius (122 Fahrenheit), the highest recorded in India.

The brutal heat can melt tarmac on the roads and puts millions of people at risk, with nearly 2,500 victims perishing from sunstroke in 2015.

Currently just five per cent of Indian households are equipped with AC compared to 90 per cent in the United States and 60 per cent in China, up from virtually zero 30 years ago.

But India’s AC market is catching up fast, seeing doubledigi­t growth in the last decade as incomes rise and electricit­y supplies become more reliable.

“It’s no longer a luxury product but a necessity,” said Kanwal Jeet Jawa, India head of Japanese manufactur­er Daikin, whose factory in Rajasthan churns out 1.2 million AC units per year.

“ACs increase productivi­ty and life expectancy. Everyone deserves an AC,” he told AFP.

The irony is that as humans try to stay cool, the refrigeran­ts inside AC units and the generation of electricit­y needed to power the appliances are exacerbati­ng global warming.

In addition, studies – including by the World Health Organisati­on and UN-Habitat – show that the heat generating motors inside AC units can themselves push up temperatur­es in urban areas, where the appliances are widely used, by a degree or more.

As demand grows, the amount of energy consumed globally by AC units could triple by 2050, requiring new electricit­y capacity equivalent to the combined current capacity of the US, the EU and Japan, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency says.

India currently generates about two-thirds of its electricit­y with coal and gas, and despite ambitious plans for renewable energy the country is set to remain highly dependent on hydrocarbo­ns for decades to come.

One possible source of hope is if Indians buy more energy- efficient AC units, and manufactur­ers like Daikin are promoting these over older technologi­es.

But they are pricier, and Indian consumers that have AC are slow to upgrade, partly due to an ingrained culture of repairing devices rather than buying new ones.

In June the Indian government issued an “advisory” to AC makers to keep the default setting at 24 degrees Celsius to save billions of units of electricit­y and reduce emissions.

But for now the measure is not mandatory, and with many people expressing outrage it is unclear how effective it will be.

As the latest internatio­nal climate change powwow COP24 gets under way in Poland this week, Behror electronic­s store owner Ram Vikas Yadav says his customers have bigger worries than global warming.

“People want ACs to keep their homes cool,” Yadav, who says his sales have rocket 150 per cent every year, told AFP. “This year I sold 300 ACs.”

Yadav said rural families in particular, attracted by aggressive marketing by manufactur­ers, are ditching traditiona­l ways to cool their homes.

These include ceiling fans or air coolers – a fan-run device that blows cool air off water- soaked pads, which are often a haven for disease- carrying mosquitoes.

Laundryman Kumar too feels the summers have become hotter than usual in recent years, pushing him to invest in AC.

“Scientists keep on saying such things but I can at least have some sound sleep now.”—

 ?? — AFP photo ?? This photograph taken on Nov 23 shows Indian workers on the production line in the Daikin air conditioni­ng plant in Neemrana, about 120km southwest of the Indian capital New Delhi. - With rising incomes, millions of families in small towns and cities are adopting Kumar’s tactics to get respite from the blistering heat amid concerns that air conditione­rs have an adverse impact on the climate.
— AFP photo This photograph taken on Nov 23 shows Indian workers on the production line in the Daikin air conditioni­ng plant in Neemrana, about 120km southwest of the Indian capital New Delhi. - With rising incomes, millions of families in small towns and cities are adopting Kumar’s tactics to get respite from the blistering heat amid concerns that air conditione­rs have an adverse impact on the climate.

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