Well it pumps hot air into the outside world. Thus causing more heat and stuff. A fridge keeps it inside the house. And people who have ACs usually have more Acs then fridges.
Sure, but the inside and the outside of your house aren’t different universes, the heat that your fridge emits still gets out into the world. Dense urban areas with widespread AC units can indeed be slightly hotter than if there were no AC’s. We’re talking 1-2°C. That shouldn’t be a big issue for the local environment. And that heat is not what’s causing climate change. Climate change is caused by greenhouse gasses, not by heat-emitting electrical devices
Eh, technically both contribute. Heat from electrical devices still gets dumped into the environment, and a good portion of that electricity is produced with greenhouse gasses (coal or oil-fired power plants).
Generally, though, yeah, the heat from running AC (or, say, a desk fan) is miniscule compared to other factors.
The heat from electrical devices are basically negligible compared to what the sun beams into the planet, otherwise solar panels would be physics defying.
The problem has always been greenhouse gases causing the sun heat to escape slower than we collect them.
Well it pumps hot air into the outside world. Thus causing more heat and stuff. A fridge keeps it inside the house. And people who have ACs usually have more Acs then fridges.
Your phrasing of “a lot of bad stuff” sounded like you were saying that AC puts out chemicals or something.
No, but many air conditioners make racist social media posts, aggressively catcall female passerby, and support child marriage.
Sure, but the inside and the outside of your house aren’t different universes, the heat that your fridge emits still gets out into the world. Dense urban areas with widespread AC units can indeed be slightly hotter than if there were no AC’s. We’re talking 1-2°C. That shouldn’t be a big issue for the local environment. And that heat is not what’s causing climate change. Climate change is caused by greenhouse gasses, not by heat-emitting electrical devices
Eh, technically both contribute. Heat from electrical devices still gets dumped into the environment, and a good portion of that electricity is produced with greenhouse gasses (coal or oil-fired power plants).
Generally, though, yeah, the heat from running AC (or, say, a desk fan) is miniscule compared to other factors.
The heat from electrical devices are basically negligible compared to what the sun beams into the planet, otherwise solar panels would be physics defying.
The problem has always been greenhouse gases causing the sun heat to escape slower than we collect them.