Sure because it requires electrical generation plants, which for the most part burn fossil fuels like coal, to work more. That means more greenhouse gases.
2006-08-02 09:04:25
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answer #1
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answered by Sir J 7
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This summer's heat wave has made it obvious. When it is hotter outside, like this past July, (on of the hottest recorded months), there was a serious energy crisis because it took so much more energy to run everyone's air conditioning.
2006-08-02 09:05:58
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answer #2
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answered by SpartanHoplite 1
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The lack of Air Conditioning would cause a Health Crisis like it does in Europe when it gets unusually hot there. Besides there is no energy crisis in my neck of the wood. The price of oil may be high but I don't cool my house with oil. We get our electricity from a nuclear power plant. I'll turn my AC off when Barbra Streisand turns hers off!
2006-08-02 09:23:40
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answer #3
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answered by scarlettt_ohara 6
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Yes. Air conditioning moves heat from inside to outside. It takes energy to do this.
2006-08-02 09:10:10
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answer #4
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answered by Paul K 6
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Yes. During a heat wave, when everyone cranks on the AC, it places a huge strain on the electrical resources. The spike in energy consumption can cause brown-outs or even black-outs.
Governor Romney, in the state of MA, has asked all residents to limit their electrical consumption during this heatwave because there are concerns for massive state-wide power failures.
2006-08-02 09:06:24
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answer #5
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answered by Molly M 3
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It does by 2 ways:
Energy consumption(to compress the refrigerant). For every 3-4 KW of heat that air conditioning removes, it consumers around 1 Kw of electricity.
Also through the refrigerant itself which usually causes warming of atmosphere when it is released from the refrigerant circuit(as in the case of leakage)
2006-08-02 09:24:39
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answer #6
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answered by Mohammed R 4
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Please define energy crisis. I am not aware of an actual crisis. AC uses available electrical power which puts increased demand on utility companies. This returns higher prices to consumers. If the system gets overtaxed it can cause brown outs or blackouts. But a crisis in the US? Where?
2006-08-02 09:05:30
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answer #7
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answered by The Grand Inquisitor 5
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Yes, anything that uses electricity adds to the energy crisis.
2006-08-02 09:04:40
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answer #8
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answered by wileykit27 1
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it truly is a reliable suggestion on value saving. despite the indisputable fact that the precedence is how? even as the more youthful one does no longer have equipped-in cooiling gadget. Like what their elders had. The youthful one from day one were born and raised with all of it the time. a thanks to close it down? look contained in the actual international. Why all of them desire workstation video games in staying interior. Than the gentle, breeze, flora and timber or the birds and the bees. till all the surroundings get tousled without fieldworks. even as each thing exceeded the table-suitable with environmental administration as ok. Luke 8.5-8,10-17 What do you imagine?
2016-11-27 21:28:57
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answer #9
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answered by ? 4
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Of course. With good insulation, you can open your windows at night to cool down the house then close them during the day.
Some people run their AC all day so the house is cool when they return home at night. What a waste.
But don't blame only AC. Look at the SUV, the long commute to work, the freezers, wine coolers, etc.
2006-08-02 09:03:59
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answer #10
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answered by Plasmapuppy 7
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Yes. Air Conditioners suck a lot of energy to cool your home. Older models are obviously less efficient. If you want to conserve energy, set the thermostat on your unit higher and use fans and open windows to cool your home when possible.
2006-08-02 09:03:08
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answer #11
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answered by bablunt 3
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