AIR CONDITIONING SERVICING

AIR CONDITIONING SERVICING DAILY
Menu
  • Home
  • AC Repair
  • Air Conditioning
  • HVAC
  • Furnace Repair
  • Heating Repair
  • TERMS AND CONDITIONS
  • PRIVACY POLICY
  • CONTACT US

Home ยป How Air-Conditioning Creates a Climate Conundrum

How Air-Conditioning Creates a Climate Conundrum

HVAC Expert October 25, 2022

The need for air-conditioning will skyrocket as the planet heats off, setting up a disturbing climate change feedback loop. Illustration: himHallows/Ikon Images

Summer is here in North America, which means in many places it’s too hot for comfort. To escape the sweltering heat, birds pant, take a dip in the water, and hide from the sun. Humans have an additional edge over biology: air-conditioning. With access to electricity, we are able to alter the air temperature itself.

Air-conditioning is expensive: It costs U.S. homeowners a whopping $29 billion each year. But it saves lives. In summer 2021, a heatwave sent the mercury soaring to record temperatures in the Pacific Northwest, a region that’s relatively under-air-conditioned: In Seattle 44 percent of households have AC, compared to 91 percent nationwide. The North American death toll surpassed 1,000.

Scientists say this heatwave would have been “virtually impossible” without global warming. And heatwaves will become only more frequent, prolonged, and deadly as the decades march on. That makes air-conditioning a life-saving adaptation to climate change. However, it’s hard to feel good about it because AC also makes global warming worse.

Be Cool

There’s no time like the present to start using AC more sustainably.
Automotive Air Conditioning Parts Market 2021 | Covid-19 Impact Analysis
Automotive Air Conditioning Parts Market 2021 | Covid-19 Impact AnalysisRead more

Turn Up Your Thermostat
“One of the easiest things is to not over-air-condition spaces,” Miller says. No one should be shivering indoors in summer. According to the Department of Energy, every degree you raise on your thermostat saves 1 percent on bills during an eight-hour period. Investing in smart thermostats, like those from Nest or Ecobee, can save costs, energy, and emissions.

Buy the Right System
Centralized HVAC systems and heat pumps consume less electricity than window units do. Look for an appliance’s ENERGY STAR label before adding it to your cart.

Keep It in Shape
Clean air filters, seal ducts and gaps, and invest in preventative maintenance.

Use Indoor Fans
Studies show that running a fan, instead of switching on air-conditioning, reduces energy use by 76 percent.

Seek Cooler Spaces
Move to basements, pools, public cooling stations, libraries, or the outdoors to catch a breeze and avoid overusing AC in your home.

Power Down
If you’re not home for extended periods, shut down the system. Ask yourself: Am I cooling my space for luxury or for need? You can handle a little heat. And try opening your windows at night, Miller suggests: “Then you can hear the birds in the morning!”—S.R.

The Feedback Loop

As long as our electricity comes from fossil fuels, air-conditioning will present a troubling climate conundrum. Today, two-thirds of the world’s electricity is produced by burning coal and natural gas, which emit carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases that warm our planet.

“There’s this really interesting loop,” says energy and climate researcher Shelie Miller, from the University of Michigan. The more we run AC, the more electricity we use; more electricity releases more greenhouse gases, heating the planet and requiring even more AC to stay cool. “It’s both a response to what is happening and also a driver,” says Renee Obringer, an energy researcher from Penn State University.

Current AC technology incurs another climate cost: hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), the industrial chemicals in AC units that cool our rooms. Once in the atmosphere, the five most commonly used HFCs absorb 150 to 5,000 times more of the sun’s energy than carbon dioxide does.

Uncool Inequities

Across the globe high temperatures and heatwaves are growing more common, but not everyone has equal access to room-cooling tech. Today, ACs are clustered mostly in wealthier countries. In the United States and Japan, 9 out of 10 households have AC units. In contrast, only 1 in 10 households have ACs in emerging economies like India and Indonesia, and about 3 in 10 in Brazil and Mexico.

These tropical countries have the most need. They already suffer hotter weather year-round and are experiencing deadlier heatwaves due to climate change. Then, as wealth increases in these countries, “we’re actually going to see really rapid expansion of air-conditioning across the world,” Miller says. Scientists predict that the global demand for room ACs will surge from 1.2 billion units in 2018 to beyond 5 billion units by 2050 among those who can afford it, including a fivefold increase in the tropics and subtropics. If all cooling needs were met, regardless of wealth, 14 billion AC units would be needed by 2050.  

“Now it really becomes a matter of adaptation,” says Doug Ahl, executive vice president at Slipstream, an organization invested in climate solutions. “How do we make sure that all citizens have access to everything that the wealthy have access to?”

How Air-Conditioning Creates a Climate Conundrum

The Global Rise of AC By 2050 installed AC units are projected to surge beyond 5 billion, including a fivefold increase in the tropics and subtropics. If all cooling needs were met, regardless of wealth, 14 billion units would be needed by 2050. Graphic: Julie Rossman/Audubon. Source: International Energy Agency

The Way Out of It

One of the most effective ways to reduce AC emissions is to power our grid differently, using clean energy instead of fossil fuels, Miller says. “Anytime we can green the electricity grid, we’re going to do much better in all sectors of society.” Ahl places his bets on technologies to manage the grid, such as better energy storage and artificial intelligence, which could help regulate electricity use and send it where it’s most needed.

We’ll also need new, more efficient air-conditioning tech. Phasing out HFCs is key. In 2016, 170 countries agreed to cut HFC production and consumption over 30 years under the Kigali Amendment to the Montreal Protocol. To meet those targets, manufacturers will have to switch to climate-friendly refrigerants like propane, as well as use new desiccants to reduce humidity—a process that uses a third of the energy in today’s air-conditioners.

Crucially, people will need to adjust their habits—particularly in wealthy countries with more temperate climates, which face less danger from climate-charged heatwaves. “There are technological solutions that are coming into play,” Miller says, “but a lot will come down to behavior and human acceptance.”

“To me it’s not an economic issue,” Ahl says. “Do we have the will to do it?”

This story originally ran in the Summer 2022 issue. To receive our print magazine, become a member by making a donation today.

Prev Article
Next Article

About The Author

HVAC Expert

Recent Posts

  • Is Central Air Gas Or Electric
  • Hvac Cost Per Square Foot
  • How Does Ac Freeze Up
  • How Does Central Air Work In Apartments
  • How To Clean Hvac Unit

AIR CONDITIONING SERVICING

AIR CONDITIONING SERVICING DAILY
Copyright © 2025 AIR CONDITIONING SERVICING
Theme by Air Conditioning Servicing

Ad Blocker Detected

Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker.

Refresh