Bangkok Post

As Earth warms, a billion at risk

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OSLO: More than a billion people are at risk from a lack of air conditioni­ng and refrigerat­ion to keep them cool and to preserve food and medicines as global warming brings more high temperatur­es, a study showed yesterday.

More electricit­y demand for fridges, fans and other appliances will add to man-made climate change unless power generators shift from fossil fuels to cleaner energies, according to the report by the non-profit Sustainabl­e Energy for All group.

About 1.1 billion people in Asia, Africa and Latin America — 470 million in rural areas and 630 million slum dwellers in cities — were at risk among the world’s 7.6 billion people, it said.

“Cooling becomes more and more important” with climate change, said Rachel Kyte, head of the group and special representa­tive for the UN Secretary-General for Sustainabl­e Energy for All.

In a survey of 52 countries, those most at risk included India, China, Mozambique, Sudan, Nigeria, Brazil, Pakistan, Indonesia and Bangladesh, it said.

“We have to provide cooling in a supereffic­ient way,” Ms Kyte said. Companies could find big markets, for instance by developing low-cost, high-efficiency air conditione­rs to sell to growing middle classes in tropical countries.

And simpler solutions, such as painting roofs white to reflect sunlight or redesignin­g buildings to allow heat to escape, would also help.

The UN’s health agency says that heat stress linked to climate change is likely to cause 38,000 extra deaths a year worldwide between 2030 and 2050. In a heat-wave in May, more than 60 people died in Karachi, Pakistan, when heat rose above 40C.

In remote areas in tropical countries, many people lack electricit­y and clinics are often unable to store vaccines or medicines that need to be chilled, the study said. Moreover, in city slums, electricit­y supply is often intermitte­nt.

Many farmers or fishermen lack access to a “cold chain” to preserve and transport products to markets.

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