Cooling as a Right

Why in News: In June 2025, the GoI proposed mandatory 20–28°C operating range (default 24°C) for all new ACs, sparking debate on cooling as a public health necessity and climate adaptation need, not just an energy efficiency issue.

Current Challenges

1. Low Access in India

  • Only 13% urban and 1% rural households owned ACs (2021).
  • National average ~5%; richest 10% own 72% of all ACs.

2. Global Divide

  • AC ownership: 90% households in U.S./Japan vs 6% in Sub-Saharan Africa.
  • Per capita cooling energy: U.S. = 28× India.
  • North frames cooling as adaptation; South is asked to treat it as mitigation.

3. Public Health Impact

  • WHO: 489,000 heat deaths (2000–2019); India >20,000.
  • Shortages in thermally secure housing, power supply, and public health facilities.
  • 12–15% hospitals in South Asia/SSA lack electricity.

4. Labour Productivity

  • 80% of the workforce (agriculture, construction, vending) exposed to heat stress.
  • Heat Action Plans exist but are weakly implemented.

Way Forward

  • Universalise cooling access as a development right, not luxury.
  • Invest in public cooling infrastructure: shelters, powered health facilities, cold chains.
  • Strengthen Heat Action Plans with funding, legal backing, and inter-agency coordination.
  • Promote energy-efficient technology alongside international finance transfers from the North.
  • Link cooling to labour rights, social safety nets, and climate justice.

Conclusion

Cooling in the global South is no longer comfort—it is a non-negotiable right for survival, health, and climate resilience.

  • GS Paper 3 (Environment & Economy): Climate change adaptation, energy efficiency, sustainable infrastructure.

Q. “Cooling is no longer a matter of comfort in the Global South, but a frontline adaptation need. Discuss the inequities in cooling access in India and suggest measures to make it both sustainable and inclusive.” (250 words)

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