Carol Farbotko1, Gordon Waitt. 1. Australian Centre for Cultural Environmental Research, University of Wollongong, New South Wales. carolf@uow.edu.au
Abstract
ISSUE ADDRESSED: Decreasing the risk of heat-stress is an imperative in health promotion, and is widely accepted as necessary for successful adaptation to climate change. Less well understood are the vulnerabilities that air-conditioning use exacerbates, and conversely, the need for the promotion of alternative strategies for coping with heat wave conditions. This paper considers these issues with a focus on the role of air-conditioning in the everyday life of elderly public housing tenants living alone, a sector of the population that has been identified as being at high risk of suffering heat stress. METHODS: A vulnerability analysis of domestic air-conditioning use, drawing on literature and policy on air-conditioning practices and ethnographic research with households. RESULTS: Residential air-conditioning exacerbated existing inequities. Case studies of two specifically selected low-income elderly single person households revealed that such households were unlikely to be able to afford this 'solution' to increasing exposure to heat waves in the absence of energy subsidies. Residential air-conditioning use during heat waves caused unintended side-effects, such as system-wide blackouts, which, in turn, led to escalating electricity costs as power companies responded by upgrading infrastructure to cope with periods of excess demand. Air-conditioning also contributed to emissions that cause climate change. CONCLUSIONS: Residential air-conditioning is a potentially maladaptive technology for reducing the risk of heat stress.
ISSUE ADDRESSED: Decreasing the risk of heat-stress is an imperative in health promotion, and is widely accepted as necessary for successful adaptation to climate change. Less well understood are the vulnerabilities that air-conditioning use exacerbates, and conversely, the need for the promotion of alternative strategies for coping with heat wave conditions. This paper considers these issues with a focus on the role of air-conditioning in the everyday life of elderly public housing tenants living alone, a sector of the population that has been identified as being at high risk of suffering heat stress. METHODS: A vulnerability analysis of domestic air-conditioning use, drawing on literature and policy on air-conditioning practices and ethnographic research with households. RESULTS: Residential air-conditioning exacerbated existing inequities. Case studies of two specifically selected low-income elderly single person households revealed that such households were unlikely to be able to afford this 'solution' to increasing exposure to heat waves in the absence of energy subsidies. Residential air-conditioning use during heat waves caused unintended side-effects, such as system-wide blackouts, which, in turn, led to escalating electricity costs as power companies responded by upgrading infrastructure to cope with periods of excess demand. Air-conditioning also contributed to emissions that cause climate change. CONCLUSIONS: Residential air-conditioning is a potentially maladaptive technology for reducing the risk of heat stress.
Authors: Diane Bélanger; Pierre Gosselin; Pierre Valois; Belkacem Abdous Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health Date: 2014-10-24 Impact factor: 3.390
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Authors: Yuming Guo; Antonio Gasparrini; Ben G Armstrong; Benjawan Tawatsupa; Aurelio Tobias; Eric Lavigne; Micheline de Sousa Zanotti Stagliorio Coelho; Xiaochuan Pan; Ho Kim; Masahiro Hashizume; Yasushi Honda; Yue-Liang Leon Guo; Chang-Fu Wu; Antonella Zanobetti; Joel D Schwartz; Michelle L Bell; Matteo Scortichini; Paola Michelozzi; Kornwipa Punnasiri; Shanshan Li; Linwei Tian; Samuel David Osorio Garcia; Xerxes Seposo; Ala Overcenco; Ariana Zeka; Patrick Goodman; Tran Ngoc Dang; Do Van Dung; Fatemeh Mayvaneh; Paulo Hilario Nascimento Saldiva; Gail Williams; Shilu Tong Journal: Environ Health Perspect Date: 2017-08-10 Impact factor: 9.031