The provision of cold is a vital foundation of modern society - without it medicine, data and the supply and preservation of food would break down. Cooling is also energy intensive; estimates suggest that it consumes up to 14% of Britain’s electricity and £5.2 billion each year is spent on energy for cold across the grid and transport. These figures will be significantly higher in warmer countries, while in rapidly developing nations such as China and India investment in cooling is starting to boom.
Yet, compared to electricity, transport and heat, cold and cooling have received little attention in the international energy debate. The commission will research new ways of providing cold in a sustainable way, specifically through a system level approach, as well as exploring the economic opportunities this new clean cold industry could present.
The commission is chaired by Lord Teverson, Principal Spokesperson for Transport and former Member of the European Parliament, and brings together leading figures from the public, private and third sectors together with university academics to focus attention on contemporary issues of global, national and civic concern in order to generate new thinking and identify innovative policy solutions.
Professor Martin Freer, Director of the Birmingham Energy Institute and academic co-lead for the commission said: