Viewpoint: Air-Conditioning Will Be the End of Us

Trying to engineer hot weather out of existence in an age of man-made global warming is indefensible

  • Share
  • Read Later
Getty Images

Earlier this week, as the temperature in New York City hit the upper 90s and the heat index topped 100, my utility provider issued a heat alert and advised customers to use air-conditioning “wisely.” It was a nice, polite gesture but also an utterly ineffectual one. After all, despite our other green tendencies, most Americans still believe that the wise way to use air conditioners is to crank them up, cooling down every room in the house — or even better, relax in the cold blasts of a movie theater or shopping mall, where someone else pays the bills. Today Americans use twice as much energy for air-conditioning as we did 20 years ago, and more than the rest of the world’s nations combined. As a climate-change adaptation strategy, this is as dumb as it gets.

I’m hardly against air-conditioning. During heat waves, artificial cooling can save the lives of old, sick and frail people, and epidemiologists have shown that owning an AC unit is one of the strongest predictors of who survives during dangerously hot summer weeks. I’ve long advocated public-health programs that help truly vulnerable people, whether isolated elders in broiling urban apartments or farm workers who toil in sunbaked fields, by giving them easy access to air-conditioning.

(MORE: How to Survive a Heat Wave)

I also recognize that air conditioners can enhance productivity in offices and make factories safer for workers who might otherwise wilt in searing temperatures. Used conservatively — say, to reduce indoor temperatures to the mid-70s in rooms that, because of shortsighted design, cannot be cooled by cross-ventilation from fans and windows — air conditioners may well generate enough benefits to balance the indisputable, irreversible damage they generate. But in most situations, the case for air-conditioning is made of hot air.

What’s indefensible is our habit of converting homes, offices and massive commercial outlets into igloos on summer days, regardless of how hot it is outdoors. Recently, New York City prohibited stores from pumping arctic air out onto the searing sidewalks in an attempt to lure customers while burning through fossil fuels in suicidal fashion. I can’t help but wonder whether cities like New York will ever prohibit stores from cooling their facilities below, say, 70°F. No doubt a law like that would raise even more objections than Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s attempt to ban big sodas, but it might well be necessary if we can’t turn down the dial on our own.

(MORE: Why Summer in the City Will Get Deadlier)

I’m skeptical that American businesses and consumers will reduce their use of air-conditioning without new rules and regulations, especially now that natural gas has helped bring down energy bills and the short-term costs of cranking the AC are relatively low. Part of the problem is that in recent decades, the fastest-growing U.S. cities — places like Las Vegas, Phoenix and Austin — have effectively been built on air-conditioning. (This is also true in the Middle East and Asia, and as a result, global energy consumption is soaring precisely when it needs to be lowered.) Throughout the country, most designs for new office, commercial and residential property rely entirely on AC, rather than on time-honored cooling technologies such as shading from trees and cross-ventilation from windows and fans. As a result, there is now an expectation that indoor air will be frigid on even the steamiest days everywhere from the Deep South to the Great West. What’s worse, this expectation is spreading to the nations where American culture carries influence; sales of air conditioners rose 20% in India and China last year.

Trying to engineer hot weather out of existence rather than adjust our culture of consumption for the age of climate change is one of our biggest environmental blind spots. If you can’t stand the heat, you should know that blasting the AC will ultimately make us all even hotter. Let’s put our air conditioners on ice before it’s too late.

234 comments
rmcmahon2
rmcmahon2

Yes, there are some buildings which have temperatures way too low....they could turn up the thermostat with no problem.  We're in this together, like it or not.    As he points out, despite efficiency improvements, Americans still use twice as much power as 20 years ago, which surprised me.   As much as I like the desert, don't think I'd want to be living there when the water runs out. 

agi
agi

Great article. My family only turns on the AC on really hot days, and have gotten ourselves accustomed to about 74 degrees F. As a result, we no longer feel the need for it most of the time. (Average summer daily high temp in our area is 86 degrees F.) On visits to the U.S. I have to carry a sweater during the summer because the buildings are just too cold.



vstillwell
vstillwell

Well, with the ongoing droughts and hot weather, living in the Southwest might not be so desirable in the near future. The lakes that feed those cities are drying up. No water, no cities. Just saying. 

SactoMan81
SactoMan81

I  think the author doesn't realize today's 2013 technology air conditioners use WAY less power and use modern refrigerants that don't damage the ozone, either. A modern "4 ton" A/C compressor for a whole house climate control system uses less power than the older "3 ton" A/C compressors of old.

ThomasEiden
ThomasEiden like.author.displayName like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 3 Like

I don't think I have enough fingers to count the number of fallacious or pseudo-scientific statements in this article. Just think of what sort of petty dictator this author would be if he was a politician like Bloomberg.

hangooker
hangooker like.author.displayName 1 Like

@ThomasEiden -- Amen.  We have a sociologist making pronouncements about business operations, public policy and supposed "hard science" related to "global warming" aka "climate change".  He compares apples to mangos, while calling them both grapes, and then it only gets worse.

mahadragon
mahadragon like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

The reason we use twice as much A/C now compared to 20 yrs ago is lots more people are living in the desert. Population of areas like all of Southern CA, Phoenix, Arizona, Texas, Las Vegas, etc. have increased dramatically. These are areas where A/C is not an option but a survival tool. 

I was born in the San Francisco Bay Area, none of my family members have A/C and none of them plan to get it either because it's a moderate climate. I currently live in Seattle and I don't have A/C. None of my dozen family members in Seattle have A/C either and don't need it either cause evenings get real cool.

auronlu
auronlu like.author.displayName 1 Like

@mahadragon I've turned my A/C on two times this year so far, both times for guests.

Southern California. On 95 degree days I just wear lighter clothes. It's not that difficult.

SmoothEdward1
SmoothEdward1 like.author.displayName 1 Like

Good luck with getting people to use less air conditioning. Why can't we find ways to power air conditioners more efficiently. With the planet getting warmer the long term need for cooling will be more not less.

littleredtop
littleredtop like.author.displayName 1 Like

@SmoothEdward1 Good idea!  Why can't we power our AC units with the ever increasing heat from the sun.  Small steam turbines could power small generators which in turn would power our AC units.  And, the best part of this solution is that it's basically low tech and once the unit is installed there would be no further expense. 

matlock01
matlock01

It would be great if someone came up with an alternative to ac. Perhaps they should sponsor a contest!

StanleyJames
StanleyJames

stop driving big cars.  Insulate your home.  close the shades on the sunny side,  use flourescent lights,  get a day nightt thermostat.  Plug up all the leakes especially in the basement in cold climate areas.  Weatehr strip.  Get a more efficient heater and AC the nect time the old piece of junk needs more more $$ to ifx then its worth etc Put in ceiling fans in most often used rooms - feels a lot cooler and uses 10% of the pwoer a room AC uses

We've done all of those things, except the old booger of a 40 year old house heater doesnt want to die its natural death

Here in MD, our heating and AC bills are half of our neighbors in a very similar 4o year old house.

afmajret
afmajret like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

I'm guessing the author lives above the 42nd degree north latitude line. It gets warm enough there twice every other year. Try living in Arizona without AC. Be my guest.

 

CobaltBomb
CobaltBomb like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

@afmajret Use a swamp cooler and live with it. It's your choice to live there.

hangooker
hangooker like.author.displayName 1 Like

@CobaltBomb @afmajret -- actually, many people don't "choose" to live where they live.  Many people can only get a job in a certain place and that is where they live.  

DeniseRae
DeniseRae

@CobaltBomb @afmajret I live in Palm Springs and swamp coolers are good for maybe two months, then you need the a/c. Then you have people like me that can't use swamp coolers because it affects my asthma. Right it's my choice and it is also MY choice to use my a/c.

afmajret
afmajret like.author.displayName like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 3 Like

@CobaltBomb @afmajret I don't live there, just saying it is easy for people who live in cooler climates to give people who don't advice about air conditioning usage. How about the northern tier cut back on their use of heat during the winter?


bitcoinsky
bitcoinsky like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

Great article.  Save the trees!

DBritt
DBritt like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

While I can't argue with the sentiment behind this article, I wonder whether singling it particular activities is productive. Wouldn't the better solution be to price in the externality of carbon dioxide release in all our activities? That way we can decide how to spend it. See for instance feed in tariffs.

In any case, if we're going to target one particular activity it would have to be air travel.

DBritt
DBritt

Singling OUT. Sorry, written on a phone.

pat.j.studer
pat.j.studer like.author.displayName 1 Like

i agree, the way we are living is a sin and i think the lord will hols us accountable.  just a few generations have used most of the worlds resources and polluted our world, we all need to minimize our use of power at the very least, i see people leave air cond. on in business all weekend when they are closed, also government buildings are the worst. 

StanleyJames
StanleyJames

@pat.j.studer I dongt agree with the religious part but one of the reasons the Japanese entered WWII was lack of natural resources.

Do people remember the "southeast Asia co-prosperity spheer - the Japanese invaded SE Aisa because they needed Rice, Rubber, tin and oil.


BTW they followed their emperor who was a (Demi?) God in their culture

ianbrettcooper
ianbrettcooper

I agree that A/C use has to stop, but I don't think anyone will be doing it anytime soon. Some things just have to happen naturally, and until there's a financial incentive to do it, very few people will stop abusing A/C. Fortunately, the coming peak-oil-fueled financial crisis will just about put paid to frivolous use of pretty much any of our modern conveniences.

On a lighter note, I think it's funny that the author thinks that when he goes to a movie theater or mall, 'someone else' is paying the AC bill. Does he really think his ticket price pays for just the movie? Does he really think the money he forks over at the mall only pays for the stuff he buys? LOL. What a rube!

anon44
anon44 like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

@ianbrettcooper You assume he's buying something and not just wandering around freeloading on the AC in the mall

Yago32
Yago32

Looks like you have never experienced and entire Sumer ( 7-8 months) in South Florida (or may be in New Orleans) in where the main problem isn't just the sun, but rather the swampy humidity coming from the Gulf of Mexico currents and the swamps in the area. IF you don't have you house seal from outside (windows, vents, doors) and the AC on (77º F at my own house) your house will succumb to humidity destruction and Toxic Molds in no time, furniture, clothes and equipment damage.  So you can't just open the window and let the air cool you, that would be a very bad idea here in South Florida. 

I do agree with a need for a more responsible ways of using the AC, and the need to educate new comers into it. The cooling of your home is a balance between Humidity and Heat, check the vents, seal the windows, use shade in the windows when the sun is baking that side of the house, let the AC in Auto so it doesn't over work, plants helps a lot too, an much more. We need more efficient ways of cooling, new technologies and cleaner ways to generate energy, but sadly, the Companies do a lot of money with this old technology, so they don't have the need to really improve. 


StanleyJames
StanleyJames like.author.displayName 1 Like

@Yago32 Lots of opportunities in some areas to install solar power, eg our community college installed it over most of a multithousand car parking lot

It provides on sunny days more power then needed and with new techology the extra power now feeds back into the grid and the meter actually runs backwards

Its still expensive but it s coming into its own.

Our state (MD) is installing some wind generators out over the ocean a half mile out  IN palm springs  CA, just about 10 miles north there are thousands of those wind generators\

Even some farmers and businesses in low population areas are installing them, so economically it must make sense

DavidPittelli
DavidPittelli like.author.displayName like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 3 Like

Obviously office buildings with flat roofs, walls of glass and windows that don't open are an abomination, as they mean running the AC even when it's 65 out (and sunny). And perhaps building codes should address this. But when it's hotter than 80F or so, any office where the inhabitants are free to use AC, will use its AC, which means closing up the windows in any case. 

What I don't like about this article is its deliberate vagueness combined with preachy tone and over-the-top "end of us" rhetoric, leading me to conclude that he really wants to outlaw AC, or set thermostat limits, and to a much higher temperature than 70, yet he's vague about exactly what he's advocating. 

FWIW, I have no problem with a state not allowing stores to run their AC while leaving doors propped open; such waste seems like a zero-sum game at best for retailers. And when a heat wave looks set to risk power outages, then yes, even telling people not to run their AC below 75 can be a reasonable alternative to no AC at all. (But a fixed limit regardless of weather makes no sense, as when it's 75 out and really humid, you need to set the AC below 70 to clear out the humidity.) Such laws would be easy to enforce for stores, but not so much for peoples' houses.

Another legislation to consider: for new construction, require that condos and apartment buildings have separately billed AC for each unit. When the cost of running AC is socialized across a building or development, people leave their AC running all day even if they're out.

DeniseRae
DeniseRae

@DavidPittelli When I lived in apartments, each unit had it's own a/c and I was responsible for my own electricity, unlike you guys on the east coast.

davidhoffman
davidhoffman

@DavidPittelli , The vast majority of long term multiple unit residential properties in the USA do not include the use of electricity in the rent charge. Each unit pays for the electricity it uses. Obviously for the small percentage of the property that are common volumes, the rent charge covers the electricity used in those spaces. Your legislative idea seems to be made unnecessary by the real world situation. Since most high rise work places are no longer fans of having jumper suicides, you can forget about big windows that open up. I also have a need to keep the servers, PCs, and client computers cool, and in relatively low humidity, to prevent expensive early equipment failures.  

CaliCurmudgeon
CaliCurmudgeon like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

Time gets more and more stupid. Time to tromp off to the library to find all the Time articles citing global cooling and the New Ice Age back in the 1970's, said to be caused by industrial activity and water vapor from jumbo jets.

holygoat
holygoat like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

This was meant for the Onion, right?

mbtexas
mbtexas like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

Obviously someone who has not lived in southern Texas during the summer.

ciendolor
ciendolor like.author.displayName like.author.displayName like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 4 Like

... another sociologist with definite opinions on physics and engineering.  Clearly not married.

seenmostofit
seenmostofit

@ciendolor The occupation and picture say it all. Another professional student type telling the rest of the world how to live. Spend all of your life in school and you too will be a professor some day.

edkollin
edkollin like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

Getting off the global warming thing author is not wrong in that you do not need every public place to be 65 degrees. Most people will be chilly or cold wearing casual summer clothes in those temps. Also computer rooms do not need to be 50 degrees that's a tradition from decades ago when computes needed to be in super cooled rooms. . But when temps are approaching 100 and dew points are in the 70s air conditioning is needed.  healthy people will survive it but they will be less productive.  There is no one optimal temperature, depends on person, what they are wearing, how thy are feeling generally etc. 

StanleyJames
StanleyJames like.author.displayName 1 Like

@edkollin I'm perfetly comfortable at home at 80 F, even working around the house.

My secret for the winter, both inside and outside, is to wear long johns, even cotton helps a lot

BillWalsh
BillWalsh like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

This "article" portrays ignorance so overwhelming it must be contrived.

All of the "climate change" "models" have proven themselves false, yet, this "author" assumes all of it to be as factual as "sky is blue."

Beyond that, power plants operate at one speed, using less AC will not reduce the amount of fuel used to produce electricity. At least. It unless or until many more power plants are built so peak power needs can be managed better.

At its essence this diatribe expresses a hatred of modernity and of human achievement. No doubt, while "writing" it, he sat in an exquisite modern office building with a carefully manufactured indoor climate and the hipocrisy is completely lost on this "thinker."

StanleyJames
StanleyJames

@BillWalsh FAlse according to Faux news

2. the amount of fuel used by power plants is directly related to the LOAD, not the speed which is constant.  Its how much work it takes to turn the gen - as the load goes up, the sytem automaticallyu increases fuel consumption to keep teh speed up


Whoever told you that is ignorant or lying     Prob Faux news, teh repub spin machine.  Too bad we cant pull the plug on those lying despicable people

Booby
Booby

@BillWalsh one for the optimistic bias bandwagon, go get your brain rewired sir, maybe you don't have to be a homosapien anymore

BobLippman
BobLippman like.author.displayName like.author.displayName like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 4 Like

I suppose you aren't much for science. Maybe you can try reading this article about the effect loss of sea ice is having, and will continue to have, on the jet stream:  http://skepticalscience.com/jetstream-guide.html

And FWIW, you are also wrong about less AC not reducing demand on the grid - why do you think we get power outages on the hottest days when everyone is running their AC at the highest setting?  Surprising fact:  if we use less electricity as a society, we need to produce less electricity and burn less coal.  

There is no hatred of modernity in me. Quite the opposite.  I think it's high time to leave the coal and natural gas turbines behind us in the 19th and 20th centuries, and move on to solar, wind, insulation, not to mention smarter building design including shading, venting and mass loading (brick, stone and concrete construction) that have worked for thousands of years in the desert communities of the middle east and work just as well here in the USA.

AbaDablam
AbaDablam

@BobLippman In terms of insulation, yes there are techniques centuries old, from the desert, but they require urban sprawl, they cannot be translated into dense urban buildings. For skyscrapers, there are also insulation techniques, but it is not that easy to count on the mass of the material when you build up high, and why not, also need to be earthquake-proof. 

In short, it is quite a challenge to build an earthquakeproof skyscrapper in 1m thick adobe

StanleyJames
StanleyJames

@BobLippman    Bob - lots fo new coal plants are more effiicient - it helps, part of a solution

Natural gas is great but I'm concerned about the fracking biz.  they pour chemicals down under pressure that can posion the ground water.

My best frriend from my youth died of Lukemia at age 26  He lived nextt to a river in Woburn Mass where the kids used to throw firecrackers into the water and the water would igite due to solvents and cleaners dumpted therr by metal working mfrs.  There a booka and movie how it took a lawyer 3 years and his own bankrruptcy before he finally got a multimillion $$settle ment from the deniers.  Sri I forget toe name.

BTW the same thing used to happen to a river in cleveland -it would catch fire from all the oily stuff poured in it

BTW womeone said something abou air travel -  new Jets are many imes quieter and much much more efficient fule wise.  They, like airplane wings are designed with super- computers

holygoat
holygoat

@BobLippman Solor, wind and other renewable simply do not deliver the amount of power needed to serve our civilization. The UK is building several DIESEL generators to back up their wind farms. You may not like coal, but it -- along with natural gas and nuclear fission -- are the most effective and economical sources of energy at the moment. Purposely eschewing those sources for far less reliable, far more expensive renewables is folly.

RJWagner
RJWagner

@holygoat @BobLippman We have so much coal, that might as well be considered renewable too.  Same with NG and Oil, if liberals will actually let us frack it out of the ground. Right now we're only limited to private lands with O'Loser in the WH.

Guys like this goat don't grasp the concept of energy density and what a miracle fuel oil is.  A 5lb gallon of gasoline will take your car as far as a 300lb+ battery in a Chevy Volt.  You can put a gallon of gas in your tank in seconds, while it takes 4-8 hours to charge your car.  And, we're supposed to call this advancement?

Ok, so you get a Leaf and you can go 90 miles with no gas backup.  So, stretch it out a little too much, and you need a tow truck.