Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Nations pledge to cut cooling emissions by 68% by 2050

cooling emissions pledge Reuters/Costfoto/NurPhoto
An air conditioner factory in China: Such equipment uses 20 percent of global electricity today
  • Global Cooling Pledge signed at Cop28
  • Emissions predicted to surge by 2050
  • Mena warming twice global average

More than 60 countries have backed a pledge at Cop28 to cut air conditioning and related emissions by 68 percent of 2022 levels by 2050.

They did so as a United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) found that global cooling capacity will treble by then.

The Global Cooling Pledge marks the world’s first collective focus on energy emissions from the cooling sector, which includes the air conditioning, refrigeration and other related industries. 

The pledge is a joint initiative between the Cop28 UAE presidency and lobby group the Cool Coalition, which consists of 26 countries that work to provide fair access to cooling to protect people against extreme heat. 

Around 30 percent of the world’s population is exposed to “life-threatening” high temperatures for at least 20 days a year and these numbers will increase as the planet warms, the coalition says. 

The Middle East and North Africa region is particularly vulnerable to climate change and is warming on average twice as fast as the global average. 

UNEP’s report published on Tuesday predicts that as installed cooling capacity trebles by 2050, global cooling emissions will surge to between 4.4 billion and 6.1 billion metric tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent by that year.

That would equate to one-tenth of anticipated additional global emissions and strain electric grids. Cooling equipment represents 20 percent of total electricity consumption today and is expected to more than double by 2050, according to the report.

However, global efforts to curb cooling emissions could prevent the release of up to 78 billion metric tonnes of CO2 equivalent, it added. 

“As temperatures rise, it is critical we work together to improve energy efficiency and reduce emissions from the cooling sector while increasing access to sustainable cooling,” Cop28 president Sultan Al Jaber said. 

“This access is especially important for the most vulnerable communities.”

Latest articles

An extension of Diriyah's Bujairi Terrace, a popular nightspot, will open in November

Diriyah giga-project to open first hotel in November

Diriyah, one of Saudi Arabia’s leading giga-projects, will finally open its first hotel in November along with other attractions and sites, its CEO said this week.  “This November we’ll open another few kilometres of parks, we’ll open our first Bab Samhan hotel, we’ll open our first museum which is the Diriyah Art Futures Museum, we’ll […]

King Abdulaziz International Airport: the number of international flights increased but there were less than 27.4 million international visitors to the kingdom last year

Passenger numbers rise 26% in Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia said this week that its total number of air passengers rose 26 percent to 112 million in 2023. This includes a 46 percent rise in the total number of international travellers to 61 million.  The number means the kingdom’s airports are approaching full capacity, which is 116 million passengers a year, including 45 […]

Oil workers in Venezuela, a founder member of Opec. The IEA predicts slower demand growth

IEA and Opec move further apart on global oil demand

The division between the International Energy Agency and oil producers’ group Opec has deepened as the Paris-based energy watchdog once again curtailed its oil demand outlook for 2024, amid softer macro sentiment. In its monthly report, the IEA forecast on Wednesday that world fuel demand will grow by 1.1 million barrels per day (bpd) this […]

Tourists visit the tombs of the Nabatean civilisation in AlUla. Saudi Arabia's goal is for tourism to make up 10 percent of GDP by 2030

Affluent tourists around the globe on Saudi Arabia’s radar

Saudi Arabia will invest more than $800 billion in its main giga-projects by the next decade as part of a tourism expansion strategy focused on affluent tourists in China, India and Europe.  The kingdom’s tourism minister Ahmed Al-Khateeb, speaking at the Qatar Investment Forum, said: “We’re building and investing in major destinations like Neom, Red […]