Otago Daily Times

Otago researcher seeks cool advice from seasoned Kiwis

- JAMIE MORTON

AUCKLAND: Be it blackout shades or chilled sheets, Kiwis have long had their own hacks at cooling down hot homes without air conditioni­ng — now a University of Otago researcher wants to hear more about them.

Many New Zealand homes are woefully prepared to deal with summer’s extreme heat.

A recent Stats NZ survey of 6700 homes found 36% were sitting at 25degC or more over summer — and sometimes even above 30degC — compared with a comfortabl­e indoor range of 20degC to 25degC.

A third were also colder than 18degC over winter — or below World Health Organisati­on standards — something linked to people renting poorlyinsu­lated homes and struggling to pay for everyday needs.

This winter ‘‘energy poverty’’ and its wide public health impacts has been the major focus of Dr Kimberley O’Sullivan’s research.

‘‘Mostly that has meant that we’ve focused on whether people can be warm enough in winter, but actually it means being cool enough in summer, too.’’

She pointed out six of New Zealand’s top 10 warmest years occurred in the last decade, and the country was seeing more frequent and severe hot days, which came with their own implicatio­ns for health and energy use.

‘‘Over the last 20 years we’ve also had rapid uptake of heat pumps, and over half of New Zealand households with a heat pump have reported using it for cooling in summer,’’ she said.

‘‘So now households have both a mechanism for active

cooling — and a greater need for reducing home temperatur­es in summer.’’

In a newlylaunc­hed study, supported by the Marsden Fund, she sought to answer how not only Kiwis were managing summer heat flows through their homes, but also how this was changing over time.

‘‘I’m especially looking for the kinds of knowledge that is sometimes called knowhow — or what people know from experience,’’ she said, adding that included how Kiwis were using measures ranging from curtains to heat pumps.

‘‘This year, I’ll start with a postal survey in regions with more extreme summer heat to get some initial answers to questions like how comfortabl­e people find their homes in summer, if they try to adjust the temperatur­e, whether that’s changed over time, and whether they feel they know enough about these issues.’’

She was particular­ly keen to hear from multiple generation­s of the same families, and what advice had been passed down.

‘‘I also want to make sure that we’re including Maori whanau, Maori have lived in Aotearoa longest and will have wisdom to offer.’’

Finally, the threeyear pro

ject would compile temperatur­e and relative humidity records using data loggers in a sample of houses, and how people were using energy throughout each day of a week.

‘‘As far as I’m aware, these approaches haven’t been combined like this before to look at these questions — and they definitely haven’t been used like this in New Zealand,’’ she said.

‘‘One thing that will be quite challengin­g, I think, is to usefully weave all of the data back together to make one big story or picture, integratin­g everything at the end in a way so that the sum is greater than the parts.

‘‘The parts as individual studies would all be useful, but I’m hoping to come out with something extra by combining them.

‘‘If we have a really good picture of what people know and do, as well as what their needs are when it comes to managing summer heat at home, then we might be able to tailor different advice and policies where they are needed.

‘‘The goal is that this will help to enhance our resilience to climate change and improve public health and wellbeing.’’ — The New Zealand Herald

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