KEY POINTS
  • A shift to energy-efficient air conditioning appliances could cut as much as 460 billion metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions in the next four decades, according to a new report from the U.N. Environment Programme and the International Energy Agency. 
  • On the current warming trajectory, it's virtually certain that 2020 will be among the top hottest years in recorded history.
  • The number of air conditioning units globally is expected to quadruple by 2050, from 3.6 billion to 14 billion by mid-century.

As the world heats up, converting to energy-efficient cooling systems is a major way to curb greenhouse gas emissions and limit climate change, according to a new report from the U.N. Environment Programme and the International Energy Agency. 

A shift to energy-efficient air conditioning appliances could cut as much as 460 billion metric tons of global greenhouse gas emissions — or about eight years of emissions based on 2018 levels — in the next four decades, according to the report titled "Cooling Emissions and Policy Synthesis."