7/18/2018

BILLION+ *CLIMATE-RISK* BOUNDED


OVER A billion people struggle to survive and stay cool as Earth heats up.

Yes, more than a billion people are at risk from lack of air conditioning and refrigeration to keep them cool and to preserve food and medicines as global warming brings more high temperatures, a study showed on Monday.

More electricity demand for fridges, fans and other appliances will add to man-made climate change unless power generation shifts from fossil fuels to cleaner energies, according to the report by the  non-profit Sustainable Energy for All group.

About 1.1 billion people in Asia, Africa and Latin America - 47 million in rural areas and 630 million slum dwellers in cities - were at risk among the world's 7.6 billion people, it said.

"Cooling becomes more and more important," with climate change, Rachel Kyte, head of the group and special representative for the U.N. Secretary General for Sustainable Energy for All, told Reuters.

In a survey of 52 countries, those most a risk included India, China, Mozambique, Sudan, Nigeria, Brazil, Pakistan, Indonesia and Bangladesh," it said

"We have to provide cooling in a super efficient way," Kyte said. Companies could provide big markets, for instance by developing  low-cost high efficiency air conditioners to sell to growing middle classes in tropical countries.

And simpler solutions, such as painting roofs white to reflect sunlight or redesigning buildings to allow heat to escape, would also help.

The UN's health agency says that the heat stress linked to climate change is likely to cause 38,000  extra deaths a year worldwide between 2030 and 2050.

In a heat wave in May, more than 60 people died in Karachi, Pakistan, when heat rose above 40 degrees Celsius.

In remote areas in tropical countries, many people lack electricity and clinics are often unable to store vaccines or medicines that need to be chilled, the study said. And in the city slums, electricity supplies are often intermittent.

Last week, a study by the  University of Birmingham in Britain projected that the number of cooling appliances could  quadruple by 2050 to 14 billion worldwide, driving a surge in energy consumption. [Agencies]

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