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Electric fans no longer enough to cool most vulnerable in U.S.

Temperatures are increasingly exceeding the threshold where electric fans can help, and poorer citizens are right on the front-line

August 09, 2023 | Arlington, VA/Durham, NC/New York City, NY Car Condenser

Electric fans no longer enough to cool most vulnerable in U.S.

Ann Kaiser (U.S.) Email: ann.kaiser@tnc.org

Tom Jennings (Europe) Email: tom.jennings@tnc.org

As climate change drives increasingly extreme summer temperatures across many regions of the United States, electric fans – traditionally the go-to option for affordable home cooling – are proving increasingly ineffective, limiting the capacity of the nation’s most socially vulnerable communities to keep themselves cool without air conditioning.

That is the headline finding of a paper published today in the journal GeoHealth by a cross-disciplinary team of scientists from Duke University, Environmental Defense Fund (EDF), and The Nature Conservancy (TNC).

Researchers dug into data based on historical weather records from 1950-2021 in hour-by-hour detail, revealing that conditions considered to be outside of the effective limits for electric fan use are an increasingly common phenomenon across the continental U.S. They then correlated this data with communities scoring highly on the social vulnerability index (SVI) to reach an ominous conclusion: from coast to coast, the geographic extent of temperatures considered too high for fans to be effective is growing – particularly in socially vulnerable areas – while the number of hours when ambient temperatures are within safe limits is trending in the opposite direction.

Commenting on the study’s significance, senior author Dr. Luke Parsons of Duke University and TNC explained: “The hum of an electric fan on a front porch is one of the iconic sounds of the U.S. summer, and with good reason. Coupled with drinking enough water, the simple act of using fans to blow air across our skin is one of the easiest and least expensive ways we can cool ourselves, if the air isn’t too hot and humid. Our study shows that although most hours in the day are safe for fan use, there are regions of the continental U.S. that now experience hundreds or even thousands of hours per year where outdoor temperatures are simply too high for fans to help.

There are regions of the continental U.S. that now experience hundreds or even thousands of hours per year where outdoor temperatures are simply too high for fans to help.

“At a time when extreme heat is already one of the leading causes of weather-related deaths nationwide, we hope these findings will make people realize that warming is already impacting us here at home in the US, especially those who are the least able to cope with the impacts of climate change. We also hope this work equips officials to make better-informed decisions about the direction of cooling resources to vulnerable communities.”

Recent decades have seen the number of hours considered unsafe for fan use increase by an of average ~70% across most of the continental U.S. Although most of the US is warming, people living in high-vulnerability locations are 1.5-2x more likely to experience hotter climate conditions than the population at large. Adaptation measures, such as increasing shade via strategically placed trees and structures, or installing reflective roofs and solar panels, can help reduce heat.

Elaborating on the study’s findings, c0-author Dr. Ashley Ward – Director of the Heat Policy Innovation Hub at Duke University’s Nicholas Institute for Energy, Environment & Sustainability – said: “Electrification made cheap, mass-produced fans the affordable cooling option of choice for American households, even as air-conditioning became increasingly mainstream. More recently, however, we’ve discovered a temperature threshold beyond which basic electric fans can actually compound the problem by increasing the amount of heat travelling over our skin. For this reason, we need to shift our perspective and stop viewing air-conditioning as a luxury, when actually it’s an increasingly life-saving intervention – particularly for our most vulnerable populations.”

Providing further context, co-author Dr. Fiona Lo – whose research work at Environmental Defense Fund focuses on the human health impacts of near-term warming – added: “These findings may not seem so alarming for those with domestic air-conditioning. But from what we know about Earth’s shifting climate and the rising incidence of heat-related health conditions across the country, our findings should act as a warning to state and local leaders, particularly in the South and West of the U.S., where communities are particularly vulnerable to heat-related illnesses and death. In these places, the need to direct greater investment into alternative forms of cooling, including nature-based solutions and available technologies, is particularly urgent if we want to keep people safe in a fast-changing world.”

We need to shift our perspective and stop viewing air-conditioning as a luxury, when actually it’s an increasingly life-saving intervention – particularly for our most vulnerable populations.

Parsons L.A., Lo. F., Ward A., Shindell D., Raman S.R. Higher temperatures in socially vulnerable US communities increasingly limit safe use of electric fans for cooling. GeoHealth.

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Electric fans no longer enough to cool most vulnerable in U.S.

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