Environmentally Harmful Dumping of Inefficient and Obsolete Air Conditioners in Africa

he demand for air conditioners that provide thermal comfort is steadily growing across the African continent as consumers seek to improve their quality of life in the face of urbanization and rising global temperatures. Since 2016, Africaā€™s market for new split room air conditioners has grown by approximately 5%, annually.

As manufacturing and industrialized economies place increasingly stringent standards on room ACs sold domestically, while allowing continued export of technology that cannot legally be sold in the country of export as a consequence of failure to meet environmental, safety, energy efficiency, or other product standards, importing countries risk becoming dumping grounds for inefficient, environmentally harmful products using obsolete refrigerants. Weak or non-existent energy performance standards and the lack of proactive anti-environmental dumping policies in many African countries have facilitated environmentally harmful dumping of inefficient, high-global warming potential cooling products into African markets.

ā€œEnvironmentally Harmful Dumping of Inefficient and Obsolete Air Conditioners in Africaā€ details the extent of the problem across ten countries in North, West, East, and Southern Africa, ultimately providing policymakers with a set of solutions to encourage a transition toward highly-efficient, sustainable cooling technologies. CLASP researched and wrote the report in collaboration with the Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development (IGSD).

Find the full report, annexes, and executive summary in English and French HERE.

On July 1, 2020, CLASP and IGSD hosted the “Environmentally Harmful Dumping of Inefficient and Obsolete Air Conditioners in Africa” webinar to discuss the findings of the report.Ā HEREĀ Ā you can watch a record of the webinar.