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Home | Business & Economy | Social Entrepreneurship | Turn off your air conditioner

Turn off your air conditioner

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image (Image by Flickr user Jan Tik (cc:by))

It may be hot, but air conditioners are robbing people of the ability to withstand heat. One man wants to stop it.

This story was originally covered by PRI's Here and Now. For more, listen to the audio above.

Comfortable temperatures aren't fixed. There is a range of temperatures in which people can feel comfortable, depending on what they have experienced in recent days and weeks. One thing is certain, though. "In the age of air conditioning," author Stan Cox told PRI's Here and Now, "we have become less heat tolerant, both physically and mentally."

Air conditioners are nearly ubiquitous in American society, making people less tolerant of heat. Cox, the author of Losing Our Cool: Uncomfortable Truths About Our Air-Conditioned World (and Finding New Ways to Get Through the Summer), believes "We have built our society to be addicted to air conditioning."

Air conditioning may seem like a necessity in central Kansas, where Cox lives, since summer temperatures routinely top 100 degrees. But Cox and his family have lived without air conditioning for 10 years. They have a system, but turn it for just one day each year to make sure that it still works.

There is a difference, according to Cox, between temperature control for public health and the wasteful kind of air conditioning use that most people experience every day. Air conditioning has saved lives in heat waves, and that's undoubtedly good. Cox has a problem with the "more lavish, routine use of air conditioning in much of the rest of our lives when it's not really needed."

Not only is air conditioning wasteful and harmful for the environment, it adversely affects society, too. Air conditioning pushes people inside to avoid the heat, rather than outside, where they can enjoy their neighbors and their community. Cox told PRI's The Takeaway, "It really has caused an estrangement from one another."

The rest of the world seems to be following the lead of the United States in using more air conditioning, rather than less. According to Cox, "Right now in the city of Mumbai, India, for example, 40 percent of all electricity use in that city is going for air conditioning, and it's only a small portion of the population that has it."

Considering how heavily people rely on air conditioners, there would likely be a withdrawal process -- like kicking an addiction -- if people were to stop using it. Soon, however, people may not have a choice. Cox cautions people:

We've taken something that was a luxury not very long ago, and promoted it to a necessity. And some day, maybe not too far in the future, we're going to have to accepting hard limits on energy and start making choices. And we need to put that on the list of potential cuts when we start cutting our use of resources.

"Here and Now" is an essential midday news magazine for those who want the latest news and expanded conversation on today's hot-button topics: public affairs, foreign policy, science and technology, the arts and more. More "Here and Now"

Subscribe to comments feed Comments (11 posted):

Ugnius on 29 July, 2010 01:05:09
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People,eat more raw foods! and you will feel comfortable without air-conditioning :)
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Chris B on 29 July, 2010 05:19:44
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We live in North Carolina USA and have not used our air conditioning for 5 years now. You get used to it.
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Bill Kolasa on 31 July, 2010 07:39:09
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Wow! This is an enviro-statist, limited-resource-thinking article, if I ever read one. Jimmy Carter would be proud.

I agree that being outdoors is better for a human--both long-term physically as well as psychologically--than being cooped up indoors during the summer (ever longingly gaze out the window from a cubicle farm?), but the U.S. consumes more energy today than ever before because advancement in technology made it possible. That advancement was led by people who wanted to make well-earned money for providing value to people. That technology advancement is continuing, exponentially, now. We have no resources to run out of because all resources are inventions of the human mind. Read Paul Pilzer's book "Unlimited Wealth" or "The Next Millionaires."
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KelBel on 03 August, 2010 10:05:57
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I guess I would agree, up to a point. Sure were are over-reliant on air conditioners, but there is no "getting used to" the summers here in Phoenix. I run my air conditioner at 85 to 87 to save energy, but turning it completely off is not an option.
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Shantella B. on 04 August, 2010 11:51:27
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How about our furry friends? People who have
pets and live in hot climes really do need the
air. It's unfair to expect pets to just get used
to life without ac.
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Alfiezebra on 04 August, 2010 01:13:24
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Few buildings have a.c. here in Monterey, California. When temperatures get to 80 Fahrenheit people everywhere are complaining about the unbearable weather. Under 65F and you see down jackets over multiple layers of wool, cashmere, etc., amazing how tender we can be. A. C. dries out the sinus and it really another crutch in our pampered lives. Animals already know what to do when the going gets tough, don't kid yourself. Open some windows. Make lemonade. Hey, go sit in the shade with your neighbors. Most of all, don't whine.
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Phoneman702 on 05 August, 2010 10:16:30
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Agree with the over usage of a/c, unfortunately in places like Las Vegas, NV where it's normally 110F in the summer and can peak to 115F and lasts 4 months out of the year. If it weren't for a/c here, no one would live in or visit Vegas.
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Di on 07 August, 2010 01:35:59
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Maybe people shouldn't be living in artificial places like Vegas. There's a reason very few human groups have managed to make their home in the desert. Las Vegas is one big waste of energy.
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comment101 on 07 August, 2010 05:26:48
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I can remember when Jimmy Carter came out with his program to save energy. The mandate was for everyone to set their thermostats at 80 degrees in the summer. I was living in Florida at the time. People tried to comply with this from the first day that was designated. It lasted all of about one week before they decided it was absurd.

Whenever there is a heat wave, medical authorities warn people with heart or respiratory conditions to stay in air conditioning. Many of those without access to it are in danger of death. Where does one individual who is not a physician or public health authority get off contradicting this - and being granted unquestioned credibility by PRI?

If one were to create a satire of the attitudes typical of public radio listeners, one would be hard pressed to invent a parody to rival this. The ultimate part is where this individual states that air conditioning is bad for society because people go inside to get out of the heat, rather than staying outside interacting with their sweating neighbors.

This is the kind of thing that gives we liberals a very bad name. Why? Because it is absurd!
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rff on 21 August, 2010 02:53:01
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Please move to the South and try to live without air conditioning. People did do it for a long time, but people also went without bathing daily or wearing deoderant for a long time without complaining because they didn't know the difference. Should we stop doing those things too?

It's the middle of August. The heat index is 115F. The humidity is 100%. I'm drenched in sweat after spending 6 minutes outside!! I think if this was forced, you would see a sharp increase in heat-related deaths, especially among the very young and very old.
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