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Air-conditioning: Our Cross to Bear

By Stan Cox, AlterNet. Posted June 22, 2006.


Those air-conditioners that keep things cool and comfortable inside are helping make the outside world even nastier.
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When it's hot and humid out and the air-conditioner's not running, America suffers. Babies break out in rashes, couples bicker, computers go haywire. In much of the nation, an August power outage is viewed not as an inconvenience but as a public health emergency.

In the 50 years since air-conditioning hit the mass market, America has become so well-addicted that our dependence goes almost entirely unremarked. A/C is built into our economy and our culture. Stepping from a torrid parking lot into a 72-degree, air-conditioned lobby can provide a degree of instantaneous relief and physical pleasure experienced through few other legal means. But if the effect of air-conditioning on a hot human being can be compared to that of a pain-relieving drug, its economic impact is more like that of an anabolic steroid. And withdrawal, when it comes, will be painful.

We're as committed to air-conditioning as we are to cars and computer chips. And a device lucky enough to become indispensable can demand and get whatever it needs to keep running. For the air-conditioner, that's a lot.

The costly care and feeding of AC

Like a refrigerator, an air-conditioner works by piping a chemical refrigerant through cycles of compression and expansion. The refrigerant absorbs heat from cool interior air and releases it to the hot air of the great outdoors. In doing so, it's impeded by the Second Law of Thermodynamics, or Entropy Law, which says that temperatures tend to even out -- that heat naturally flows from a hot to a cold area. So an air-conditioner has to mechanically compress the gaseous refrigerant into much hotter liquid form and pump it through outdoor coils from which it can release the heat it has absorbed. To do that requires a lot of energy, usually from a power plant or a vehicle engine.

Almost one kilowatt-hour of electricity out of every five consumed in the United States in a full year goes to cooling buildings. Much of the nation's excess power-generating capacity, which sits idle until needed to satisfy quick spikes in demand, has had to be built because of air-conditioning.

The electricity used annually to air-condition America's homes, stores, offices, factories, schools, churches, libraries, domed stadiums, hospitals, warehouses, prisons and other buildings (not including what's used to cool manufacturing processes and military facilities) exceeds the entire electricity consumption of the world's second and fourth most populous nations -- India and Indonesia -- combined.

The refreshing air that comes out of an air-conditioning system has an evil twin: carbon-laden exhaust from the utilities that power it. Just about 50 percent of U.S. electricity is generated with coal; 21 percent with other fossil fuels, mostly natural gas; 20 percent with nuclear fission; less than 7 percent with hydroelectric dams; and about 2 percent with biomass, wind and solar methods combined. Coal is the worst carbon dioxide producer, but all of those methods generate greenhouse gases and other ecological hazards during construction and operation.

In January, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) raised energy-efficiency standards for newly manufactured home central air-conditioners by 30 percent. Central air units typically last 15 to 20 years, so the new regulation will have little effect in the near future. Even if all units were replaced overnight, it would mean less than a 5 percent reduction in the power that's used to air-condition buildings. That's because the new rules don't apply to window units or to nonresidential air-conditioning.

The average household in the southeastern United States consumes almost twice as much electricity as the average household in New England, but air-conditioning doesn't account for that entire disparity. Southerners use a lot more power for all appliances, whatever the season. Of course, northern households consume more fossil fuel for heat, but in the dead of winter, heating cannot be dispensed with.

There is scope to save energy in both heating and air-conditioning by improving insulation. Energy used in heating could also be cut by setting thermostats at cooler temperatures, but air-conditioning is more of an all-or-nothing proposition. At a certain point on the thermostat, a stuffy, frugally cooled house or office becomes intolerable; a hot breeze from outside can be far preferable.

Driving from a cool home to a bracing workplace to a chilly supermarket would be a severe shock to the system if done in a non-air-conditioned car, so you'll find such cars only on "vintage" lots. Government tests have shown that running an air-conditioner can decrease a car's fuel efficiency by 4 miles per gallon. Excess fuel consumption is lower on the highway, higher in the city and incalculable when the engine and AC are left running in a parked pickup truck to keep a Dachshund comfortable.


Digg!

Stan Cox is a plant breeder and writer in Salina, Kansas (average high for the past week: 95 degrees).

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This is so true- good article
Posted by: bttl on Jun 22, 2006 3:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Personally, I hate AC. Don't have it in my car or home. I despise having to put on a sweater to go into a grocery store when it's hot outside.

AC is not sustainable. The author makes great points. The waste of fuel to provide it and the impact of that fuel use is just insane. We do need to get back to our roots. Why not design homes and businesses to take advantage of natural cooling? Just planting deciduous trees in the correct place can cool a building. So can attic fans(solar), ceiling fans, cross ventilation, and...... just a simple overhang of the roof. A properly designed roof overhang can allow the low winter sun into the building helping to heat it by solar gain and keep the high summer sun out, keeping the building cool. It works quite well- the coolest spot in my house in the summer is the south facing rooms protected by the roof overhang.

I was in a store the other day which had their AC on but it wasn't working well- the place was hot and humid but they refused to shut the blasted beast off and just open the windows and doors.
I'm all for siestas too- porches, hammocks under trees, lemonade- sounds better than an air conditioned office to me....

We need to face the fact that much of what we've done the past 50 years or so just isn't working or sustainable. Back to the drawing board.....

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» Cutting down trees Posted by: kateoneill
» Native Plants Rule Posted by: Artkansas
» RE: Native Plants Rule Posted by: kateoneill
» It works in Austin Posted by: cyberfactotum
» RE: It works in Austin Posted by: Jaja56
» RE: It works in Austin Posted by: cyberfactotum
» RE: It works in Austin Posted by: Jaja56
» RE: Try selling that nonsense in Vegas! Posted by: Robert Stevens
» RE: Try selling that nonsense in Vegas! Posted by: hansennancykay
» Vegas is a mirage. Posted by: Artkansas
» RE: Vegas is a mirage. Posted by: tanstaafl28
» RE: This is so true- good article Posted by: jessebucksc
» to jessebucksc Posted by: bttl
» RE: This is so true- good article Posted by: janakiblum
Boxes Are The Problem
Posted by: ChristopherLL on Jun 22, 2006 3:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We now live in boxes that encourage the need for air conditioning and prevent the body from becoming naturally acclimated to changing weather. Our homes are boxes without natural venting, cars generate heat and asphalt radiates the same and work places have no access to the outside. So we have built places where we are not only detached from our natural surroundings but placed in environments that are quite unnatural. And ironically all those boxes are being built bigger and bigger which will require even more energy to cool and heat. My own experience is that with a fan and a little shade I can keep comfortably cool, and I live in the South. But I admit I am a miniscule minority.

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Low-impact Home Cooling Technique
Posted by: socialpsych on Jun 22, 2006 3:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
that our grandparents (or great-grandparents) knew about and that doesn't require a tithe to the electric company:
Place one thermometer outside a southerly window and another inside a southerly room. In the morning, when the two thermometers read the same temperature, close up the house--close windows and doors and draw shades and curtains. In late afternoon or evening, when the two temperatures are nearly the same again, open the curtains and windows and leave them open all night. Repeat the procedure daily. This prevents the thermal mass of the interior of the house (walls, floors, furniture) from warming up during the day and then releasing heat into the air of rooms at night. During the day, temperatures can be up to 20 degrees cooler inside for most of the day.
It's free, it's completely harmless to the planet, and it empowers us to control our own environments and our own well-being.

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» sounds great but... Posted by: thistleblower
As things get hotter...
Posted by: churchofone on Jun 22, 2006 3:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We will be using even more air conditioning!

For me, this is a tough issue. Even though I live in the northern tier of states, I am miserable when the heat and humidity kick in. I tend to "hibernate" inside my air-conditioned home and end up with cabin fever. We try to use the a/c only when necessary, but then we're like everyone else, adding to the demand. I open the house at night and close it up in the morning. It doesn't help that we face due west, with little or no shade.

Until a better solution comes along, I'll just keep doing what I can - adding better windows, planting a tree to block the afternoon sun, keeping blinds and shades pulled during the hottest part of the day. Our little house was certainly not built for energy conservation - not in 1969!

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» RE: As things get hotter... Posted by: heartworker
Heat-triggered asthma
Posted by: Samantha Vimes on Jun 22, 2006 4:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What is a matter of comfort for most is a matter of safety for others.

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» RE: Heat-triggered asthma Posted by: Jaja56
» RE: Heat-triggered asthma Posted by: cyberfactotum
» RE: Heat-triggered asthma Posted by: Jaja56
» RE: Heat-triggered asthma Posted by: Katie13
Home
Posted by: brunowe on Jun 22, 2006 5:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My personal rule is to only use the AC on days where the Heat Index is scheduled to hit 90 and I'm going to be home. I think I used it only 10-15 days last year. Anything less than that is quite tolerable.

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KILL TWO BIRDS WITH ONE STONE- MOVE TO CANADA
Posted by: xbj on Jun 22, 2006 5:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Join me and move to Canada. Won't need air conditioning, and eventually won't contribute taxes to fund BushCheneyCo's wars, nor cannon fodder to die uselessly for them.

What could be a more elegant easier solution to two thorny problems?

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» How? Posted by: quirkygamer
» RE: How? Posted by: xbj
What this means
Posted by: daw13 on Jun 22, 2006 6:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
is that as US citizens blithely accept the Incumbency's encouragement, aided and abetted by corporate controlled media, to regard global warming as contrived liberal alarmism -- gasoline and airconditioning will become unafforadable to most of us. Thereby solving the problem.

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» RE: What this means Posted by: mrcentrist
Control the A/C's intensity
Posted by: maxpayne on Jun 22, 2006 6:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You can save big on heating/cooling bills that way. An earlier poster also brought up a good point on the thermometer and shades. A/Cs have had their issues but I wouldn't throw these babies out the window yet. We're going to have to take multi-pronged approaches to winning the war against the petrol crisis.

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Other forms of cooling
Posted by: oldsmobile on Jun 22, 2006 6:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One problem is the US economic system. In European countries, the adoption of more efficient ways of cooling (or heating for that matter) are implemented with help from government grants. Building public infrastructure is not seen as a problem, whereas in the US systems are built atomistically, with every appartement having it's own system.

For instance, district cooling that works the same way as district heating pumps cool water through pipes over a large area, the water is cooled centrally, by building a heath exchanger in the ocean or in a lake. It is possible to cool entire cities this way with very little energy.

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» RE: Where has this been done? Posted by: oldsmobile
» RE: Other forms of cooling Posted by: WhuThe?!?
» RE: Other forms of cooling Posted by: mrcentrist
» RE: Other forms of cooling Posted by: WhuThe?!?
» RE: Other forms of cooling Posted by: mrcentrist
» RE: Other forms of cooling Posted by: WhuThe?!?
» RE: Other forms of cooling Posted by: mrcentrist
» RE: Other forms of cooling Posted by: oldsmobile
» RE: Other forms of cooling Posted by: WhuThe?!?
» RE: Other forms of cooling Posted by: heatherj
Passive Cooling (and heating)
Posted by: antiapathy on Jun 22, 2006 6:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Although only a small part of the problem, new construction could contribute a large part of the solution. Developers completely ignore the environmental impacts of site orientation. If they took the time to propery orient new homes, that would reduce energy consumption. If they dared to (gasp!) install earth tubes or other "alternative" methods of cooling our costs would plummet. But these techniques are more costly on the front end, so consumers get stuck with cheap homes that end up costing too much to heat/cool.
If new home buyers realized this and started demanding passive heating/cooling design then our country could start to reduce energy consumption. Let's stop being apathetic consumers...

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why so cold?
Posted by: susanbm on Jun 22, 2006 6:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In the summer I dress for the weather, usually shorts and a woven cotton shirt. When I go to the movies, mall, grocery, restaurant, etc. I freeze to death. I have to change to long pants and bring a sweater. Why are these places kept so cold? Wouldn't the cost and damage of air conditioning be less if the temperature was kept at 74 or 76 or (horrors!) 78 rather than 72 or lower? That is still frequently 20+ degrees lower than outside. My husband's workplace (and everyplace he's ever worked at) are freezing. He sometimes comes home for lunch just to warm up. Winter has similar problems. You dress so you will be warm enough to walk outside and you broil inside. Am I the only one with this problem/observation?

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» RE: why so cold? Posted by: gar
» RE: why so cold? Posted by: kateoneill
» RE: why so cold? Posted by: WhuThe?!?
» RE: why so cold? Posted by: Polly
» RE: why so cold? Posted by: Don
» RE: why so cold? Posted by: redjenny
» you know who wants it so cold...? Posted by: thistleblower
» RE: why so cold? Posted by: Juniper
» Americans are fatter Posted by: quirkygamer
» RE: why so cold? Posted by: CollD
» RE: why so cold? Posted by: MEL810
» RE: why so cold? Posted by: redbecca
Great Article, Well Done
Posted by: NoPCZone on Jun 22, 2006 7:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When I moved south from the Great Lakes Area I was amazed at how COLD many southerners keep their houses and offices. I don't mean cool-- I mean like 68-69∘. Wearing more clothes in July than the Taliban require is a lot of the cause.

I dislike A/C except under the most extreme weather, but it is necessary in most modern construction down here. The only way to get a handle on this is more insulation and much more efficient cooling. I doubt we can tear down all of the buildings constructed since the 1950's and replace them with heavily shaded, deep-porched, high-ceilinged ones.

One unmentioned item- in many dry climates Swamp Coolers are used instead of conventional A/C. The primary coolant is water and not a refrigerant gas. Of course these are the very areas where water is at a premium.

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» RE: Great Article, Well Done Posted by: sean000
» RE: Great Article, Well Done Posted by: YogiBear
What about the heat that A/C creates
Posted by: chaoslegs on Jun 22, 2006 7:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The author didn't discuss the heat that these AC units are pumping outside. Heating up the air for the rest of us. Thanks a lot!

I also don't understand why the author thinks that people can't use PC or large TVs (32 inch in my house) when it is hot without AC. I do it all the time.

In terms of low cost approaches, I agree with an earlier poster about opening rooms at night. I go for the low cost approach in my bedroom and upstairs by using window fans to draw in cooler air that then gets circulated by ceiling fans.

I am also lucky to have an east facing 3 season porch for those really hot days. I read, listen to the radio and sweat.

The biggest loss was a huge tree, at least 50 feet tall, on the southwest corner of my property, this has cost me late day shade from the sun.

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I agree, and am paying attention, but...
Posted by: kateoneill on Jun 22, 2006 8:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
from the article:
Southerners use a lot more power for all appliances, whatever the season. Of course, northern households consume more fossil fuel for heat, but in the dead of winter, heating cannot be dispensed with.

I think it's a little unfair for the author to characterize heat as necessary in the North yet air conditioning as frivolous in the South. Those weren't Mr. Cox's words exactly, but it's how they came across to me.

No argument from me: having heat in severe winter cold is important. This past winter, my husband and I lived almost completely without heat (it's a long story, but trust me: it wasn't our first choice to do so), and it was really unpleasant, to say the least. We spent our days in coats and wrapped up in blankets, and still got very little work done from the distraction of being so uncomfortable.

So yes, heat=good. It keeps people comfortable and able to be productive, and helps prevent some illnesses and even death in the elderly.

I think some form of cooling in severe summer heat is equally important. It's just unfortunate that air conditioning, the most prevalent form of cooling, has so many detrimental qualities.

We use a variety of alternate forms of cooling our home and ourselves so that we can leave air conditioning as a last resort (and we do live in the South). But after a series of hot days with only little relief during the night, it becomes difficult to even think, and we both typically work from home.

I don't know. Maybe we're too spoiled by the culture in which we were raised. But although I now know I can survive in a colder house in the winter than I would have thought, I don't want to repeat that heat-less winter. Similarly, in the summer, we are always conscious of the amount of energy we consume when we run the AC, but we can only let it get so hot inside before we feel the need to turn it on.

The house should be somewhat cool in the winter and somewhat warm in the summer. And really, if every household and building were heated and cooled with that same idea of in mind, I don't think it would be such a big issue.

But don't get me wrong -- I'm not entirely defensive about this. I'm listening to the message in this article and in the comments, and my husband and I will be discussing ways we can improve our energy consumption footprint. I hope everyone else does, too.

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Replacing equipment? New non-ozone depleting refrigerant available
Posted by: plantland on Jun 22, 2006 8:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Leaking equipment, allowing freon to escape, really hastens glabal warming.



I am bummed that we replaced half of a central air systerm, the air handler in the attic, last summer without realizing thatit would not be compatible with the far more energy efficient compressors now coming out. Our air handler uses R22, the bad gas, and will not be compatible with the new ones out that use "Puron", or R410, which doesn't deplete the ozone layer. We will either need to replace the $3,000 air handler we just put in, or have to go with the bad old kind our new ,but being phased out, air handler requires.
So think ahead, read up, and know what you want before something breaks and you are too raggged to look into things!
WWW.consumerreportsonline.org has free articles on air.
States need laws that require leaks be fixed, and not allowing people to just keep adding freon without making repairs.Requiring checks for leaks could be more valuable than just requiring better refrigerants in new systems.

My air conditioning company said that it will not keep adding freon when the householder has refused to fix a leak, but, currently, it is up to the householder. As fly by night underground home repair services abound, we need to wonder how much additional freon is released. There is worse damage than just not paying taxes.

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Move out of the desert!
Posted by: pfv on Jun 22, 2006 8:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The real problem here is how much Americans have migrated to desert areas to live--witness the growth in Arizona, Nevada, and California's central valley, all places where humans should not permanently reside. Because we wish to live in these areas, have green lawns, and grow crops, our water supply is dwindling and being damaged, and we must air-condition the universe.

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» RE: Move out of the desert! Posted by: sweetlou
» RE: Move out of the desert! Posted by: kateoneill
» RE: Move out of the desert! Posted by: mrcentrist
» RE: Move out of the desert! Posted by: mrcentrist
» RE: Arabian desert Posted by: BlueTigress
» RE: Move out of the desert! Posted by: tanstaafl28
fascinating
Posted by: Iconoclast421 on Jun 22, 2006 9:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If the 5.5% figure is true then we spend over 50 million a day and 18 billion a year air conditioning our cars....

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People that 'hate air conditioning' are cheapskates
Posted by: RVGIV on Jun 22, 2006 9:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In my experience, most people who 'hate air conditioning' are simply cheap asses who don't want to pay for it. They usually hide behind the 'I'm an environmentalist' moniker BS.

I keep my home at a comfy 68 degrees in the summer, and 65-68 degrees in the winter. It balances out. My Wife has severe asthma and has had life threatening episodes brought on by Cincinnati summers. The summers here are miserable, 95-100 degree heat and unbearable humidity (98 degrees today). AC is as necessary in the summers here as heat is in the winter. My company thankfully keeps the office at 72, and our 100,000 SF warehouse, filled with perishable beer & wine, is kept at 67 year round.

BTW, how much electricity does all of those fans that you cheapskates are running consume?

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A/C kills community
Posted by: beltane on Jun 22, 2006 9:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Maybe part two of the article will address this point. I hope so. But I can't read this article and the posts without commenting on it. I am an old Texan who remembers the days before A/C came to town: highs over a hundred, high humidity, and in the worst of heat waves, nights that never got below 80 degrees. Truly horrible conditions that actually killed people. I read with interest the posts above that pass on some of our "ancient" wisdom about staying cool. Wisdom that has been largely lost to the general public with the advent of A/C.

But something even more important has been lost to the air conditioning revolution, and that is our sense of community. My old pre A/C house, situated in an old pre A/C neighborhood, has a porch. It has beautiful old pecan trees around it for shade. The neighborhood has sidewalks. People used to use those sidewalks to walk to the store, the park, the library, passing residents fanning themsleves on their porches, stopping to chat just so they could enjoy the respite of a shady spot.

Newer, post A/C neighborhoods in my town are devoid of porches and sidewalks. Each resident lives in their own tightly sealed bubble of privacy, emerging just long enough to scurry to their tightly sealed mobile bubble of privacy which they then navigate to yet another tightly sealed bubble, usually of commerce. There is no chance to build community when each person is so preoccupied with their separate concerns (most of which seem to revolve around earning enough money to pay for all these bubbles!)

I truly believe that this is why Texas has changed in the past 50 years from a sparsely populated hell-hole (environmentally speaking) to a densely populated hell-hole (socially speaking).

Furthermore, the air-conditioning of Texas allowed rich snot nosed Yankee preppies to move here and live comfortably while they stole our oil, and to bring their idiot sons with them so they could fulfil their dumb-ass little boy cowboy fantasies. But I'll leave discussion of the Bush family to a later time.

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» RE: A/C kills community Posted by: socialpsych
» RE: A/C kills community Posted by: kateoneill
» How can that be?????? Posted by: nunyabinis
» RE: How can that be?????? Posted by: mylungsarempty
» RE: A/C kills community Posted by: bttl
» RE: A/C kills community Posted by: wereallfukked
From Consumer reports:
Posted by: RVGIV on Jun 22, 2006 9:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"USING AIR CONDITIONING VS. OPENING THE WINDOWS

Air conditioning places more load on the engine, which can affect fuel economy. But opening the windows at highway speeds can affect fuel economy even more by disrupting the vehicle's aerodynamics. ..In our tests we found that using air conditioning had a negligible effect on fuel consumption. While driving at 65 mph gas mileage was reduced in both vehicles by about 1 mpg. The effect of opening the windows at 65 mph was about the same-it might make more of a difference if you drive faster. Because air conditioning can help keep you comfortable and alert and because most modern cars use it to keep windows defrosted, we suggest that the small trade-off in fuel economy for increased safety is worthwhile."

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» RE: From Consumer reports: Posted by: YogiBear
We're in trouble now...
Posted by: notrab68 on Jun 22, 2006 9:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Uh, oh! The sky is falling! Again!
!!!!!

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rainking
Posted by: rainking on Jun 22, 2006 10:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Please tell me this is some kind of joke. Take away A/C? And next week: George Bush got elected cuz of A/C? Are you freakin' kidding me?

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A/C Not Going Away
Posted by: grolan on Jun 22, 2006 10:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...in fact it will be used more as the climate heats up. That's just a fact. Some things can be done though.

How about a little shade? Look at any housing development - especially apartments, condos and townhouses, but family homes too. What's the first thing the developer does? Cut down every tree. Sure, it's easier and cheaper for the builder, but it leaves the buildings baking in the sun. In the summer, the a/c runs 24/7 in my apt, because I'm on the top floor on the west side - without a/c it would be 100 degrees inside. But if there were some shade, it would have to run far less. We've got to get past this approach of devastating an area before building on it - leave some damn trees standing!

People can use external sunshades too. I have one covering the west window (on the outside) - a thin, translucent but tough material that blocks 100% of UV and 60% or so of all light. It keeps the apt 10 degrees cooler just doing that, as it prevents sunlight from ever passing through the window and causing greenhouse warming inside the apt. (The company is
"Coolaroo", out of Australia. The sunshades are tough, attractive and cheap).

Buildings should be built with greenspace roofs, that help control water runoff and keep the building cooler too. Certainly not black tar roofs like so many apt buildings - they just soak up the heat. How much nicer to have a roof garden one could sit in to enjoy the breeze.

But, bottom line, a/c is not going away and will in fact be used more. The crux of all these problems, the root, is our dependence on fossil fuels, and that is what has to be attacked. A major national effort - indeed, a global effort - a Marshall Plan for energy is what's needed. Bush's greatest failure (and there are many) is not fumbling the war on terror, or Iraq, or tax cuts for the rich, or environmental abuses or any of his general incompetency - it's that as an oilman, he has failed to lead the country to an alternative energy future. We need to get off oil and on to nonpolluting alternatives. That's the only real solution, and until that happens, the problem will only get worse, no matter how much tinkering and trimming around the edges we do. And, sorry to say, unless someone comes up with a hydrogen technology that works or something else radically new, and in a big hurry, the solution has to include nuclear. Sure, nuke waste is dangerous and persistant, but it can be contained, and it does not f* up the climate. It's a case of choosing between the lesser of evils - deal with nuke waste, or stew in an overheating world. Time is very short, and the biosphere simply cannot stand much more. I fear it is already too late.

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