HomeNewsOpinionClimate Change: Homes need to turn into batteries to beat the summer power crisis

Climate Change: Homes need to turn into batteries to beat the summer power crisis

Global warming is altering the nature of power demand in the summer, and we’ll lose if we are only treating the symptoms, rather than the cause. Building technology that keeps homes insulated from the daytime heat will reduce the need for overnight cooling

June 20, 2023 / 09:21 IST
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summer heatwave
Global warming is altering the nature of power demand in the summer, and we’ll lose if we try to outrun its pace of change. (Source: Bloomberg)

The world’s climate is changing faster than we can keep up with it. With the first El Nino in four years now under way, hot and dry conditions are spreading across areas where a huge share of the world’s population lives: South and Southeast Asia, northern China, southern Africa, and the tropical Americas.

The effects are already starting to strain infrastructure that wasn’t built for such conditions. At the Koyana Dam southeast of Mumbai, one of India’s largest hydroelectric projects has gone into partial shutdown to preserve its dwindling reservoir for drinking water. Similar conditions are prevailing
across southern Kerala state. In Malaysia, the government has been flying cloud-seeding planes to refill two dams that keep Penang supplied.

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Water in the Rhine is already dipping, threatening a repeat of last year’s drought that halted one of Europe’s major transport arteries, while the lake that feeds the Panama Canal is heading to its lowest levels on record. In China, which produces about a third of the world’s hydroelectricity, year-to-date power output from the country’s dams in May fell to the lowest level since 2014. That’s despite a spate of dam-building over the past decade that should allow the country to generate a quarter more now.

Those problems are only going to increase if the current aridity persists through the rest of the season. Simultaneous increases in summer temperatures and incomes mean that air conditioning use is surging. Emerging countries such as India, China, Indonesia and the Philippines will lead the addition of 1 billion units globally this decade, but they’re not the only ones. In Europe, where fewer than 10 percent of households have air conditioners, Daikin Industries Ltd predicts its sales of the devices will increase 23 percent over the coming fiscal year.