Refrigerators and air conditioners release hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), which can be thousands of times more potent than carbon dioxide when it comes to trapping greenhouse gases in the atmosphere and leading to global warming.
Just a slight increase in income leads many people to purchase air conditioners to improve their quality of life in the sweltering tropics and subtropics, where some three billion people live, according to the study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a peer-reviewed US journal.
"Under modest assumptions about income growth, our model implies that the fraction of households with air conditioning will increase from 13 per cent today to more than 70 per cent by end of century," said the study.
"These are large changes, implying $3+ billion in increased annual electricity expenditures and a 23+ million ton annual increase in carbon dioxide emissions," said the study, led by Lucas Davis at the Haas School of Business at UC Berkeley.
Already, nearly 90 per cent of homes in the United States have air conditioning.
In comparison, India has four times the population, but also more than three times as many hot days, making that nation's total potential demand for cooling is 12 times than that in the United States.
"Air conditioning is still relatively uncommon in India and other low-income countries, but this is poised to change dramatically as incomes rise around the world," said the study.
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