The Energy Cost of Cold Thermal Discomfort in the Global South

The Global South, much of it in warm tropical latitudes, is expected to double its total energy demand by 2050. In addition to increased mean demand, greater demand for space cooling during external temperature peaks will exacerbate the strain on already fragile energy networks. Recent anecdotal evi...

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Main Authors: Abdulla N. Alnuaimi, Sukumar Natarajan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-05-01
Series:Buildings
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/10/5/93
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spelling doaj-6dc1dedbd04f40fa9dcadd21765685962020-11-25T03:45:59ZengMDPI AGBuildings2075-53092020-05-0110939310.3390/buildings10050093The Energy Cost of Cold Thermal Discomfort in the Global SouthAbdulla N. Alnuaimi0Sukumar Natarajan1Department of Architecture & Civil Engineering, University of Bath, Bath BA2 7AY, UKDepartment of Architecture & Civil Engineering, University of Bath, Bath BA2 7AY, UKThe Global South, much of it in warm tropical latitudes, is expected to double its total energy demand by 2050. In addition to increased mean demand, greater demand for space cooling during external temperature peaks will exacerbate the strain on already fragile energy networks. Recent anecdotal evidence that a proportion of the increase in cooling demand is driven by cold—rather than warm—indoor thermal discomfort, suggests the imposition of an unnecessary cooling energy cost. Here, we investigate the impact of this cost on the expanding Global South using field data from four cities in India, Philippines, and Thailand. We observe that mean cold discomfort across the four cities is roughly 45 percentage points higher than warm discomfort, suggesting warmer indoor temperatures would not only lower overall discomfort but also reduce cooling energy demand. Computer simulations using a calibrated building model reveal that average savings of 10%/Kelvin and peak reductions of 3%–19%, would be feasible across the expected external temperature range in these cities. This suggests that more climatically appropriate indoor thermal comfort standards in the Global South would not only significantly counteract the expected rise in energy demand, but also produce more comfortable indoor conditions and reduce peak demand.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/10/5/93building energythermal comfortglobal southcold thermal discomfortbuilding overcooling
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Abdulla N. Alnuaimi
Sukumar Natarajan
spellingShingle Abdulla N. Alnuaimi
Sukumar Natarajan
The Energy Cost of Cold Thermal Discomfort in the Global South
Buildings
building energy
thermal comfort
global south
cold thermal discomfort
building overcooling
author_facet Abdulla N. Alnuaimi
Sukumar Natarajan
author_sort Abdulla N. Alnuaimi
title The Energy Cost of Cold Thermal Discomfort in the Global South
title_short The Energy Cost of Cold Thermal Discomfort in the Global South
title_full The Energy Cost of Cold Thermal Discomfort in the Global South
title_fullStr The Energy Cost of Cold Thermal Discomfort in the Global South
title_full_unstemmed The Energy Cost of Cold Thermal Discomfort in the Global South
title_sort energy cost of cold thermal discomfort in the global south
publisher MDPI AG
series Buildings
issn 2075-5309
publishDate 2020-05-01
description The Global South, much of it in warm tropical latitudes, is expected to double its total energy demand by 2050. In addition to increased mean demand, greater demand for space cooling during external temperature peaks will exacerbate the strain on already fragile energy networks. Recent anecdotal evidence that a proportion of the increase in cooling demand is driven by cold—rather than warm—indoor thermal discomfort, suggests the imposition of an unnecessary cooling energy cost. Here, we investigate the impact of this cost on the expanding Global South using field data from four cities in India, Philippines, and Thailand. We observe that mean cold discomfort across the four cities is roughly 45 percentage points higher than warm discomfort, suggesting warmer indoor temperatures would not only lower overall discomfort but also reduce cooling energy demand. Computer simulations using a calibrated building model reveal that average savings of 10%/Kelvin and peak reductions of 3%–19%, would be feasible across the expected external temperature range in these cities. This suggests that more climatically appropriate indoor thermal comfort standards in the Global South would not only significantly counteract the expected rise in energy demand, but also produce more comfortable indoor conditions and reduce peak demand.
topic building energy
thermal comfort
global south
cold thermal discomfort
building overcooling
url https://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/10/5/93
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