Gulf News

Fixing a major piece of the climate puzzle

HOW WE COOL OURSELVES MAY ALSO HELP COMBAT GLOBAL WARMING

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demand in major cities like New Delhi. Businesses and homeowners in Asia and Africa are expected to buy about 700 million air-conditione­rs by 2030, and 1.6 billion by midcentury. Without major changes in the way we cool ourselves, those units will in turn crank up the global furnace.

“This is going to matter a lot,” said Lucas Davis, an associate professor at the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley. “If one is thinking about energy and environmen­t in the next couple decades, you have to think about cooling.”

Meeting in Bangkok

One way to curb emissions associated with air-conditioni­ng is already in the works: the Kigali amendment to the Montreal Protocol, the landmark 1987 pact designed to close the hole in the ozone layer by banning ozone-depleting coolants called chlorofluo­rocarbons, or CFCs. Manufactur­ers found a substitute in HFCs, and while those didn’t degrade the ozone layer, scientists soon discovered that they acted as worrisome warming agents.

The amendment reached last year in the capital of Rwanda binds nations to phase out HFCs, avoiding an estimated half degree Celsius of warming by 2100. It was embraced by environmen­talists and industry leaders alike, but its fate in the United States is unclear.

Scientists, activists and business leaders were meeting in Bangkok last week to discuss how to finance the phasing out of HFCs. Many there said they were confident the amendment would survive.

“It is imperative that we use the successful process started 30 years ago to protect the ozone layer and to ensure consumer access to technologi­es worldwide that contribute to health, safety and energy efficiency,” Kevin Fay, executive director of the Alliance for Responsibl­e Atmospheri­c Policy, which represents 95 per cent of US refrigeran­t manufactur­ers, told delegates at the meeting.

Efficiency doesn’t require a global treaty. It does, however, call for new regulatory policies on manufactur­ing standards and labelling.

It matters, researcher­s say, because cooling has a direct relationsh­ip with the building of coal-fired power plants to meet peak demand. If more air-conditione­rs are humming in more homes and offices, then more capacity will be required to meet the demand. So 1.6 billion new airconditi­oners by 2050 means thousands of new power plants will have to come online to support them.

A lot of work to do

The Lawrence Berkeley study argues that even a 30 per cent improvemen­t in efficiency could avoid the peak load equivalent of about 1,500 power plants by 2030.

But most countries have a lot of work to do in modernisin­g their energy policies.

“Many countries haven’t updated their standards in a while,” said Nihar Shah, a senior scientific engineerin­g associate at the Lawrence Berkeley laboratory and lead author of the study, which examined the markets of 19 nations. “In most of these countries there’s an opportunit­y to do both things together.”

The countries driving the bulk of demand for air-conditioni­ng — China, Brazil, India and Indonesia — have energy efficiency improvemen­t policies like labels and incentive programs. But improvemen­ts to China’s policies could have sweeping gains, because it is the main exporter to countries primarily in Southeast Asia, where demand is growing. India’s Ministry of Power is working to develop a program for bulk purchases of supereffic­ient air-conditione­rs, which may include refrigeran­t alternativ­es to HFCs.

In India alone, air-conditione­r purchases have risen sharply over the past decade. Many believe India will outpace China, which grew from 5 per cent market penetratio­n in the mid-1990s to more than 140 per cent today, meaning millions of families have more than one air conditione­r.

Durwood Zaelke, president of the Institute for Governance and Sustainabl­e Developmen­t, a non-profit based in Washington that commission­ed the lab study, said efficiency was not getting enough attention.

“We don’t pay attention to the fact that demand for airconditi­oning is growing, just as the world is becoming more populated and richer, and will grow at a much greater rate as the world gets warmer,” he said.

Scientist

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