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Want to live a sustainable and cool life? Choose more fans and less AC

By ANI | Published: April 18, 2022 12:32 PM

According to a new study by the University of Sydney, electric fans are an effective and sustainable choice to circulate air indoors as compared to air conditioners without sacrificing comfort.

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According to a new study by the University of Sydney, electric fans are an effective and sustainable choice to circulate air indoors as compared to air conditioners without sacrificing comfort.

The findings of the study were conducted by an international team of experts from the University of Sydney alongside Monash University, the University of Newcastle and Radboud University Medical Center, based in the Netherlands in the journal, 'The Lancet Planetary Health'.

The study has found using indoor fans more often allows people to reduce their air conditioner use without changing how hot they feel, paving a way for reducing future energy use and greenhouse gas emissions.

By using indoor fans, the indoor temperature threshold before it becomes uncomfortable for humans (and the main reason why we reach for the air conditioner remote during hot weather) can increase by 3 to 4 degrees C more than air conditioners use alone.

Researchers also conducted a cost-benefit analysis on the environmental impact and found the total benefit of using fans to reduce air conditioner use (from a greenhouse emissions perspective) surpassed even the switch from incandescent light bulbs to LEDs.

Modelling led by the University of Sydney found that just slightly increasing indoor air movement by fans can reduce electricity consumption and the associated yearly cost of cooling indoor spaces with air conditioners in Australia by approximately 70 per cent.

Despite warmer indoor conditions because of less air conditioner use -- the study found using fans still maintained the same comfort levels as a lower indoor temperature with regular air conditioner use.

The work showcases how making the switch to widespread indoor fan use can potentially reduce energy demand and greenhouse gas emissions.

The key lies in the fundamental way electric fans operate to cool the human body compared to air conditioners. Electric fans generate higher airspeeds across the skin surface to achieve a higher heat loss despite warmer temperatures, whilst air conditioners by themselves lower temperatures with little air movement.

"Through their sole purpose of lowering air temperatures, air conditioners feed a cycle of high electricity consumption -- often delivered by fossil fuel power stations that in turn contribute to further increases in emissions," said co-senior author Professor Ollie Jay, Director of the Heat and Health Research Incubator in the Faculty of Medicine and Health.

"The latest 'IPCC Sixth Assessment Report on Mitigation of Climate Change' emphasises the need for adoption of low-emission lifestyles, including cooling choices for thermal comfort," said lead author Dr Arunima Malik, Senior Lecturer in Sustainability at the School of Physics and Business School.

"Our study confirms that low-cost solutions such as fans have the potential to contribute emission reductions for meeting the goals of the Paris Agreement".

The researchers compared the energy use and associated greenhouse gas emissions by modelling five scenarios with different combinations of fan and air conditioner use. This included situations with fans operating at different speed settings.

After logging data on the impact of the fans on human comfort levels before they begin to feel discomfort, the number of hours above the thermal comfort limit was calculated to determine air conditioner usage, and associated energy use and greenhouse gas emissions.

"To carry out this calculation we needed to process hourly temperature data for an entire year, for the entire continent on a 150,000-cell raster grid. We were able to do this using supercomputer," said co-senior author Professor Manfred Lenzen of the School of Physics.

They found that operating fans with airspeeds of 1*2 m/s with occasional air conditioner use, compared with air conditioners alone, resulted in a 76 per cent reduction in energy use (from 5592 GWh to 1344 GWh) and associated greenhouse gas emissions (5091 kilotonnes to 1208 kilotonnes).

"We know that curbing greenhouse gas emissions is the only way we will limit future global warming," said Professor Jay.

"By increasing indoor air movement with fans, you can feel the same at a higher temperature as you will do at a lower temperature using an air conditioning unit. This is a really easy thing that most people can do now to help reduce the prodigious emissions associated with cooling homes and indoor spaces in Australia," added Professor Jay.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Ollie JayeManfred lenzenMonash UniversityUniversity Of Sydney
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