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How Air Conditioners (ACs) and Refrigerators Triggers Climate Change?

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How Air Conditioners (ACs) and Refrigerators Triggers Climate Change?
YAGAY andSUN By: YAGAY andSUN
April 23, 2025
All Articles by: YAGAY andSUN       View Profile
  • Contents

Air conditioners (ACs) and refrigerators, while providing comfort and preserving food, significantly contribute to climate change. Here's how they do it:

🌡️ 1. Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Refrigerants

ACs and refrigerators use refrigerants to cool air or preserve food. Many of these refrigerants are hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), which are potent greenhouse gases.

  • HFCs can be hundreds to thousands of times more potent than CO₂ in trapping heat in the atmosphere.
  • Leakage during operation, maintenance, or disposal releases HFCs into the atmosphere.

🔎 Example: HFC-134a, a common refrigerant, has a global warming potential (GWP) of 1,430 times that of CO₂ over 100 years.

2. High Electricity Consumption → Indirect Emissions

Both appliances consume a lot of electricity, especially in hot regions or during summer peaks.

  • In countries like India, electricity is still majorly produced using coal-based power plants.
  • So, more ACs = more electricity = more CO₂ emissions from fossil fuel burning.

🌍 3. Urban Heat Island Effect

Widespread use of ACs leads to heat being expelled outdoors. This contributes to higher ambient temperatures, especially in cities.

  • Creates a feedback loop: hotter cities → more AC use → even hotter → more emissions.

📉 4. Lifecycle Emissions

  • Manufacturing ACs and refrigerators involves mining, refining, and energy-intensive processes.
  • Improper disposal can result in refrigerants leaking into the atmosphere.

🔄 5. Low Recycling & Poor Maintenance

  • Many units are disposed of unsafely or are poorly maintained.
  • Old, inefficient systems not only use more power but often leak refrigerants.

What Can Be Done?

To mitigate the impact:

  1. Switch to natural refrigerants (e.g., ammonia, propane, CO₂).
  2. Use energy-efficient (star-rated) ACs and refrigerators.
  3. Promote and follow safe disposal & recycling practices.
  4. Improve building design to reduce cooling needs (passive cooling, green roofs, etc.).
  5. Adopt policy-level initiatives, like the Kigali Amendment, to phase down HFCs.

 

So, What Can We Do?

Problem

Better Choice

Old, leaky machines

Use energy-efficient ones (5-star 🌟)

Dirty electricity

Use solar or green energy

Hot homes

Plant trees and use fans or vents

Bad disposal

Recycle and repair, don’t trash 🚫

💡 Final Thought:

“Cool your home, not the planet!”
Let’s stay cool in smarter, planet-friendly ways.

🧊 In Summary:

"Cooling" comes at a climate cost — both direct (HFC emissions) and indirect (electricity-related CO₂). Cleaner technologies, better habits, and responsible policies are key to keeping us cool without heating the planet.

 

By: YAGAY andSUN - April 23, 2025

 

 

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