Sustainable cold chains: The missing link for sustainable development
Clean Cooling Collaborative
An initiative of ClimateWorks Foundation focused on increasing access to clean cooling. Formerly K-CEP.
Expanding global cold chains is vital if we’re to meet several of the Sustainable Development Goals relating to poverty reduction, food security, health and well-being, and climate action. That said, conventional cold chain technologies are energy intensive and harm our climate. So how can we improve and expand the global cold chain without exacerbating the climate crisis? Sustainable cold chains are the missing link.
Cold chains, which are the refrigerated portions of the supply chain, have always been an important aspect of modern life. For food, they help keep produce fresh, nutritious, and safe as it is moved from farm to fork, enhancing food security, reducing food waste, and boosting income for farmers. From a medical perspective, cold chains are crucial for the successful roll-out of immunization programs (such as for Covid-19), as well as the distribution of other life-saving medicines. Without a robust and unbroken cold chain, we can’t ensure the distribution of viable vaccines to the millions or billions of people who need them.
The importance of the cold chain
Every year, around 13% of the world’s food is lost due to a lack of effective refrigeration. This equates to 475 million tons of spoiled produce, which would be enough to feed around 950 million people. In a world where 811 million people are hungry and 2 billion people suffer from food insecurity, improving and expanding the cold chain would have a significant impact on global poverty reduction and other related development goals.?
This level of food waste results in the emission of an estimated 4.4 gigatons of CO? equivalent each year (~8% total global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions), of which, 1 gigaton of CO? equivalent is thought to come from the absence or inefficiency of cold chains. In lower-income countries, where 90% of food waste happens along the supply chain, it’s estimated that some 470 million smallholders, farmers, and downstream value chain actors experience at least a 15% reduction in their income due to these losses.
According to Sustainable Energy for All (SEforALL) , around?2.7 billion people?lack dependable access to vaccines as a result of insufficient cold chain infrastructure. It’s been estimated that more than?25% of some vaccines?are wasted globally each year due to failings along the cold chain (e.g., temperature control and logistics). While this is problematic at any time, it’s particularly inadequate at a time when we need to ensure the equitable distribution of over 10 billion doses of Covid-19 vaccines to every corner of the world. Due to the nature of many of the Covid-19 vaccines, which require almost constant refrigeration, it’s likely that?more than 85 of the world’s poorer countries?will not have widespread access to Covid-19 vaccines before 2023. Not only does this delay directly threaten the health and well-being of a large portion of Earth’s population, but it also makes it very difficult for global herd immunity to be reached, essentially putting everyone at risk.
The climate cost of cold chains
While we clearly need to take action to address these issues, it’s not quite as ‘simple’ as just expanding cold chains as they are. Conventional cold chain technologies typically use a huge amount of energy that generally comes from fossil-fuel sources; refrigerants that are often thousands of times more polluting than CO?; and transportation that runs off petrol and diesel, all of which is harming our climate. While not much data is available, it’s estimated that today’s global food cold chain infrastructure alone is responsible for around 1% of global CO? emissions. And as global temperatures rise, it is likely that emissions from cold chains will also increase due to a greater need for cooling.
If we’re to expand cold chain coverage to ensure universal access without exacerbating the climate crisis, we must do so using a whole-systems approach with technologies that are energy efficient and climate-friendly, and use low-carbon transportation. We know that this is achievable, and we must accelerate action to support the transition to sustainable cold chain technologies.?
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Improving and expanding sustainable cold chains
Cold chains, be they for food or for vaccines, are very complex systems, with lots of different stakeholders and lots of moving parts. To be effective, they require a coordinated effort across the whole system. In order to transform the cold chain sector, we need ambitious commitments and timely action from all stakeholders, whether they work in policy, finance, business, or elsewhere. This reform is imperative if we are to successfully address all of the urgent societal and climate issues that communities are facing around the world.
There are a number of actions that can and should be taken by governments and other stakeholders to expand the sustainability and coverage of cold chains:
Other elements could include introducing?sustainable procurement practices?to influence purchasing behavior; offering?training and capacity building?to ensure the local workforce can take ownership of the process; and investing in better?monitoring, maintenance, and optimization?to ensure equipment performance.?
To put it simply, we need global coverage of efficient, climate-friendly cold chains in order to meet numerous development and climate goals. From farm to fork, and laboratory to ‘last mile’, we need unbroken cold chains that are made up of energy-efficient, climate-friendly, and low-carbon technologies. We need all stakeholders?–?governments, financial institutions, private sector organizations, and NGOs?–?to make ambitious commitments and take the necessary action to support this transition.
This blog was originally posted on the Clean Cooling Collaborative's website in October 2021.