The programs giving AC for free

How to fix the cooling gap |
Bloomberg

Today's newsletter looks at how states and local charities are helping reduce the cooling gap for low-income households as the planet heats up. You can read and share the full story with your friends and followers on Bloomberg.com. For unlimited access to climate and energy news, please subscribe.  

How to fix the cooling gap

By Miquéla V Thornton

With heat advisories blanketing the eastern half of the US, air conditioners are once again working over time as essential resources to keep millions cool. But they're unevenly distributed: Many poor households are unable to afford them. 

To reduce the gap between the air conditioning haves and have nots, a growing number of programs are giving them out for free with waiting lists numbering in the thousands. And they view them as means to protect public health and reduce poverty. 

Heat-related deaths have doubled over the last quarter century, and more people will be at risk as the planet warms. Temperature increases are correlated with higher disease risk and mortality rates. Extreme heat can reduce productivity, impact children's cognitive development and lower overall wellbeing.

"Each individual heat-related death is preventable," said Kai Chen, a researcher of environmental health at Yale University, "and in the past 20 years, air conditioning use has drastically reduced heat-related mortality."

He added that without ACs, the amount of heat-related deaths in the US would likely double, especially for older adults.

Providing a free AC can help individuals cope with heat stress and better attend to pressing challenges.  Photographer: Joe Lamberti/Bloomberg

There are 14 million households without air conditioning in the US, but lack of access is more acute in some communities. In New York, 10% of households don't have AC, but that percentage doubles in many Black, Latino and low-income neighborhoods. Over 500 people die from heat in New York City each summer, mostly at home with a broken or underpowered air conditioner, according to the city's most recent report on heat mortality. The top reason for the lack of cooling: cost.

The state's Home Energy Assistance Program (HEAP) provides ACs to low-income households with members over 65 or under 6, and Governor Kathy Hochul launched a program in June that makes units available to any low-income adult with asthma, which is exacerbated by heat.

The new program, which distributes the ACs through enrollment in the state's Essentials Healthcare Plan, focuses on ages that HEAP does not cover. 

"We think this is really important as extreme weather events are happening more and more and with a lower-income population with health needs, this is absolutely a meaningful way we can help them manage their health," said Danielle Holahan, executive director at New York State of Health, the state's marketplace for affordable health insurance, which administers the program. 

But the program and others like it face challenges due to funding cuts. Federal money for many state-level heating and cooling relief programs is in peril, and energy-efficiency tax credits, which help households afford better cooling appliances, have been cut as part of President Donald Trump's recently signed tax law

The bedrock of New York's program, the Essentials Healthcare Plan, was implemented under the Affordable Care Act. According to Holahan, the program has funding for the next five years, but cuts to the ACA in the new law could remove eligibility for about 730,000 enrollees, especially lawfully present immigrants.

Read More: Trump's Billions in Climate Cuts Have Nonprofits Scrambling to Survive

Local, non-governmental groups run similar programs and have found strong demand. In Cincinnati, which will see a run of extreme heat break by the end of the week, there's a waiting list of more than 2,700 people for a program that gives out free air conditioners.

The program, run by the anti-homelessness charity St. Vincent de Paul, provides ACs to anyone 65 and older or with a medical need. Their waiting list grew by 700 in the last few weeks alone. 

While St. Vincent de Paul Cincinnati's program initially gave out fans, that felt like a "band-aid" for a persistent problem, said Kaytlynd Leinhart, who leads the organization's development and marketing. The group switched to ACs in 2019. It is funded by local donors, businesses and foundations. 

Leinhart said nonprofits carry more responsibility after pandemic-era support tapered off. She emphasized how cooling can be a stepping stone out of a crisis by providing something as simple as good night's sleep.

"If you're a single mom on one income, imagine that that's how you're starting your day every day, with your baby having not slept, you've not slept, you've been severely uncomfortable all night," she said.

Providing a free AC can help individuals cope with heat stress and better attend to pressing challenges. 

Demand is especially high this year. The Cincinnati program gave out over 700 ACs in both 2023 and 2024 while in 2022, it provided 980 units. This year, it expects to exceed 1,000 units. 

However, providing that many will cost $110,000, and the group only has $75,000 in funding this year. With such a long waitlist, many won't receive relief.

Climate change is making summers hotter in New York and Cincinnati, places that already regularly experience temperatures above 90F (32C). Traditionally cool cities where air conditioning is less prevalent are also seeing temperatures rise. As it gets hotter, though, free home cooling programs are becoming more common. 

Air conditioning, in short, is becoming a necessity for some people, according to Laila Atalla, a building decarbonization expert at clean energy nonprofit RMI. 

"Cooling is going from being a luxury or a 'nice to have' in many places to being essential for health and safety," said Atalla.

Continue reading the full story on Bloomberg.com. 

This week we learned

  1. Samuel L. Jackson really likes offshore wind. Or at least he likes it enough to film a pro-wind message for Sweden's Vattenfall AB. The video was released a day after Donald Trump called wind farms a "disgrace" during a visit to Scotland.
  2. Japan set a new national temperature record. Tamba City, in Hyogo prefecture, posted a high of 41.2C (106F) on Wednesday, NHK reported. That beats the previous all-time high of 41.1C set in two other prefectures in 2020 and 2018. 
  3. The world is far off from a goal to triple renewable capacity by 2030. The landmark pledge made by countries less than two years ago at COP28 in Dubai  already looks in danger of not being met, a new report finds.
  4. Australia, meanwhile, is boosting its clean energy plan. The government's Capacity Investment Scheme, which guarantees project builders a minimum power price, will support another 3 gigawatts of renewable generation — enough to supply 1 million homes.
  5. Researchers have found AI isn't that great at recognizing types of bees. An artificial intelligence model scored about 50% when asked to identify one of 22 bumble bees species, a rate on par with untrained human users. The fact underscores how AI still heavily relies on collaboration with human experts for optimal results.
A bumble bee and honey bee. Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg

Worth your time

China's $167 billion hydropower project on the Yarlung Tsangpo River in Tibet — one of the biggest infrastructure endeavors in history — is a legacy-defining gamble for President Xi Jinping as he tries to sustainably revive his country's slowing economy, tighten control over a restive region and project power far beyond the country's borders. It also has climate implications: The low carbon power project has a potential capacity as high as 70 gigawatts, which could significantly cut China's coal dependence

Yet the project site is in an ecologically sensitive area and there are worries the construction could unleash a cascade of environmental consequences. The Tibetan Plateau is often called the "Third Pole" because it holds more ice and snow than anywhere on Earth outside the Arctic and Antarctic. This frozen reservoir plays a powerful role in shaping jet streams and stabilizing South Asia's climate. The surrounding basin is one of the richest biodiversity zones on the planet, home to more than 150 native species of fish — some teetering on the edge of extinction — as well as elusive snow leopards and red pandas.

Read the full story on Bloomberg.com.

The Yarlung Tsangpo river in Nyingchi. Photographer: Sun Fei/Xinhua /eyevine/Redux

Weekend listening

In 2019, a group of law students from Pacific island nations set in motion a case that made it to the world's highest court: The International Court of Justice.

The students wanted answers to two important questions: what responsibility do countries have to stop climate change? And if countries don't stop polluting, will they have to pay for the damages?

Now the ICJ has delivered its verdict, and it seems like a huge win for the climate. But is it? Laura Clarke, chief executive officer of legal non-profit ClientEarth, joins Akshat Rathi on the Zero podcast to discuss.

Listen now, and subscribe on AppleSpotify, or YouTube to get new episodes of Zero every Thursday.

People gather on a pier in Tanna, Vanuatu in December 2019. Photographer: Mario Tama/Getty Images AsiaPac

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