Episode 2: Keeping homes cool when the planet heats up

    With heat waves expected to strike more often, air conditioners might seem like an obvious solution. But these devices guzzle power – and the more we use them, the more we contribute to global heating.

    The International Energy Agency predicts that energy demand from air conditioners will triple by 2050. So how do we break that cycle?

    Interviewees featured in this episode:

    Lily Riahi, program manager at the UN Environment Program and coordinator for the Cool Coalition
    Bijal Brahmbhatt, civil engineer and director of Mahila Housing SEWA Trust in India
    Sarah El Battouty, architect and founder of ECOnsult in Egypt, non-resident scholar at the Middle East Institute

    On the Green Fence is produced by DW studios in Bonn, Germany.

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    Website – https://www.dw.com/en/on-the-green-fence/program-49760682

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    Chapters:

    00:00 Intro
    02:30 Lily Riahi lays out what’s at stake
    03:35 The CO2 footprint of air conditioning
    05:00 What’s being done about the problem?
    06:48 What are the solutions?
    08:16 Painting roofs white in India
    10:42 An explosion in demand for ACs
    12:05 Energy blackouts in Vietnam
    14:19 Rethinking our building structures
    14:57 Sarah El Battouty says Egypt is in a vicious cycle
    15:31 How are communities preparing for worse heat?
    17:01 How big is the challenge for architects?
    18:27 Upgrading homes in rural Egypt
    19:38 Examples of Indigenous knowledge about building
    21:06 A 10 degree Celsius drop in indoor temperature
    23:00 Neil signs off

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