25th December 2023
Aditya Hossain, From Dubai, UAE

The power consumption of cooling equipment would be possible to cut by at least 60 percent of the expected sectoral emissions level within 2050 provided key measures like ensuring universal access to life-saving cooling are taken, according to a new report.

 

The Global Cooling Watch report titled “Keeping It Chill: How to Meet Cooling Demands While Cutting Emissions”, published during the COP28 climate talks in Dubai, highlights that cooling sector greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions are predicted to more than double by 2050.

 

Published by the UN Environment Program-led Cool Coalition on December 5, the report suggests that Key measures could slow power growth, and cut predicted emissions by 60-96 percent while end-users could save US$1.0 trillion and the power sector up to US$5.0 trillion annually.

 

It lays out sustainable cooling measures in three areas: passive cooling, higher-energy efficiency standards, and a faster phase-down of climate-warming refrigerants.

 

Following the measures outlined in these areas would deliver the 60 percent cuts; adding rapid power grid decarbonization would reduce sectoral emissions by 96 percent.

 

The report was released in support of the Global Cooling Pledge, a joint initiative between the United Arab Emirates as host of COP28 and the Cool Coalition. Over 60 countries signed up to the pledge with commitments to reduce the climate impact of the cooling sector.

 

 

“As temperatures rise, it is critical that we work together to improve energy efficiency and reduce emissions from the cooling sector while increasing access to sustainable cooling. This access is especially important for the most vulnerable communities, who have often contributed the least to climate change but are the most exposed to its impacts,” said Dr. Sultan Al Jaber, COP28 President.

 

Climate change, population and income growth, and urbanization are increasing cooling demand, which is necessary to meet the Sustainable Development Goals.

 

Around 1.2 billion people in Africa and Asia lack access to cooling services, putting lives at risk from extreme heat, reducing farmers’ incomes, driving food loss and waste, and hindering universal vaccine access.

 

On current growth trends, cooling equipment represents 20 percent of total electricity consumption today – and is expected to more than double by 2050.

 

GHG from power consumption will increase, alongside leakage of refrigerant gases, most of which have a much higher global warming potential than carbon dioxide.

 

Under the business-as-usual scenario, emissions from cooling are predicted to account for more than 10 percent of global emissions in 2050.

 

Rising demand for often inefficient equipment, including air-conditioners and refrigerators, will require large investments in electricity generation and distribution infrastructure.

 

Inefficient equipment will also result in high electricity bills for end users, particularly in Africa and South Asia, where the fastest growth is predicted.

 

“The private sector has a huge role to play in financing and driving innovation to advance sustainable cooling, which can help fulfill vital local development needs and support global carbon reduction targets,” said Makhtar Diop, Managing Director, International Finance Corporation. “We are pleased to contribute to the Global Cooling Stocktake Report and to support the Global Cooling Pledge.”

 

Benefits for climate, human health, and prosperity Following the report’s recommendations could reduce the projected 2050 emissions from business-as-usual cooling by around 3.8 billion tonnes of CO2e.

 

The report outlines key actions to take in passive cooling strategies, higher energy efficiency standards, and a faster phase-down of climate-warming hydrofluorocarbon (HFC) refrigerants through the Kigali Amendment to the Montreal Protocol.

 

As of 2022, while more than 80 percent of countries had at least one regulatory instrument in place in these areas, implementation remains inadequate, and an integrated approach is missing. Only 30 percent of countries have regulations that enable action on all three fronts.

 

Passive cooling measures

Passive cooling measures – such as insulation, natural shading, ventilation, and reflective surfaces – can dramatically reduce cooling loads. These can be provided, in part, by the development and enforcement of building energy codes that incorporate passive cooling, and urban design.

 

Such strategies can curb the growth in demand for cooling capacity in 2050 by 24 percent, result in capital cost savings in avoided new cooling equipment of up to US$3 trillion, and reduce emissions by 1.3 billion tonnes of CO2e.

 

Higher efficiency standards

Higher efficiency standards and better labeling of all cooling equipment would triple the global average efficiency of cooling equipment in 2050 from today’s levels, delivering 30 percent of modeled energy savings, lowering energy bills, and improving the resilience and financial viability of cold chains.

 

Critical implementing policies include regularly updated Minimum Energy

Performance Standards (MEPS) are financial instruments to encourage demand for higher-efficiency products and regulations to avoid dumping low-efficiency cooling equipment into developing countries.

 

Kigali Amendment

The world has committed to phasing down HFCs through the Kigali Amendment to the Montreal Protocol – a global deal designed to protect the ozone layer and slow climate change.

 

Faster action is possible and can achieve a halving of HFC emissions in 2050 – compared to the Kigali phase-down timetable – through rapid uptake of better technologies in new equipment, better refrigerant management, and stronger national enforcement.

 

Finance is critical

The total life-cycle cost savings of $22 trillion ($17 trillion in power costs savings and $5 trillion in power generation investments) will make the sustainable cooling transition affordable. Existing business models need to be scaled to use these savings to reduce upfront costs and make the transition affordable for all.

 

Financial tools include on-bill financing (when a utility pays for an upgrade and recovers the cost through monthly power bills), risk-sharing facilities, public and private investments, green mortgages, and seed financing for cold chains. For many developing countries, dedicated concessional finance will be needed as well as incorporating sustainable cooling criteria into banks’ lending practices.


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