Until recently, I didn’t realize just how badly prepared we are for how much energy the world’s growing cooling needs will require to keep society functioning as we see more days with record-breaking heat like in the Pacific Northwest. And I’m not talking about people being able to live comfortably on warm days — I’m talking about them being able to inhabit large areas of the planet at all.
I mean, I knew that air conditioning consumed a massive amount of energy, and I knew that energy’s production released a large amount of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases into the air. But then this stat in a recent report from the International Energy Agency (IEA) shifted my perspective entirely: “328 million Americans consume more energy for cooling than the 4.4 billion people living in all of Africa, Latin America, the Middle East and Asia (excluding China), and just under all the electricity used for everything by the 1.2 billion people in Africa.”
That number has historically represented a relatively low number of people from the Seattle area. The city — which is normally somewhere in the 70 degree F range this time of year — broke its record for hottest day ever three days in a row, topping out on Monday at 108 degrees F. That same day, just across the water in British Columbia, the city of Lytton hit around 118 degrees F, making it the all-time highest temperature measured in any city in Canada — ever.
Seattle, Portland, Oregon, and the other major cities of the region just weren’t designed with these kinds of temperatures in mind. In Portland, restaurants have struggled to stay open and cable cars had to delay service as power cables literally melted. Asphalt roads warped and cracked under the heat stress in Seattle. And the power grid in Portland especially has strained to accommodate the surge in air conditioning needed to keep residents cool.
While the stretch of heat is historic, Seattleites have been adjusting their lives to this new reality for the past few years. A majority of homes in the metro region don’t have air conditioners installed, mostly because there was rarely any need aside from a few exceptionally warm days per year. But according to U.S. Census Bureau data, the area has seen a spike in the installations — 44.3 percent of homes in the city and surrounding counties now have air conditioning, compared to just 31 percent in 2013, The Seattle Times recently reported.
That number isn’t evenly distributed — just 29 percent of Seattle renters have air conditioning, according to the same data. And while many states require landlords to provide heating to tenants in the winter, the reverse isn’t true for protecting residents from the heat. I wouldn’t be surprised if in the next five years we begin to see that change, as building owners recognize the growing need.
By now, after ALL this warning and increasing danger, housing without AC should not be… a thing. In the US, at least. Not anymore. The fact that we require heating but not cooling by now is archaic and going to actually kill people (and almost certainly has alread)
— ⚙️ ALL RIGHT, WE LIVE!🔥 (@RoAnnaSylver) June 26, 2021
It’s becoming a more pressing need especially in parts of the country like the southeast that are more often experiencing both high heat and humidity. As National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration research shows, the combo can be more deadly than people realize — and at lower temperatures.
Now, if it was just a matter of U.S. domestic policy, I’d be all for an explicit right for renters to be able to comfortably inhabit their homes in the summer without running the risk of heat stroke. But zooming out globally, we have a problem. Well, actually, make that several problems.
Like I said, space cooling — air conditioners, fans and dehumidifiers — makes up a huge chunk of the world’s energy demand. It’s estimated that space cooling accounted for over 15 percent of all electricity in the U.S. in 2016 — a number that surges to almost 30 percent during peak use hours.
Are we condemned to making the hellish choice between letting people boil in their own bodies or speeding up the doom of our fragile ecosystem?
While the U.S. leads in energy consumed by cooling, China and the rest of the world are catching up. That same IEA report estimated that space cooling made up 30 percent of its increased energy demand in China since 1990, putting it on almost even footing with the U.S. “Last year in Beijing, during a heatwave, 50 percent of the power capacity was going to air conditioning,” John Dulac, an analyst at the IEA, told the Guardian in 2019. “These are ‘oh s—’ moments.”








