Indians battle intense heat with ‘mad rush’ for air conditioners, beer
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The heat has also driven power demand to a record peak as more people seek ways to cool down.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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BENGALURU - Demand for beer in India is at a multi-year high, and air-conditioner sales are skyrocketing as the intense, unprecedented heat scorching parts of the country becomes a boon for some consumer businesses.
Temperatures in the Indian capital Delhi and the western state of Rajasthan soared to almost 50 deg C in recent weeks,
Beer sales volumes are expected to jump 10 per cent this summer, and demand is at its highest since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, said Mr Vinod Giri of the Brewers’ Association of India, which represents leading beer makers Carlsberg, Anheuser-Busch InBev and United Breweries.
Beer in this scorching heat, he said, makes Indians “feel better without getting too high on alcohol”.
The heat has also driven power demand to a record peak as more people seek ways to cool down.
Mr B. Thiagarajan, managing director at air-con-to-air purifier maker Blue Star, said he has not witnessed such strong sales for air-cons in the more than 30 years he has worked in the industry.
It’s been a “mad rush... anything called air-conditioner would have got sold,” he said.
The number of affluent people in India is rising rapidly, and Mr Thiagarajan said overall air-con sales will grow 50 per cent in the April toJune summer months, outstripping the industry’s expected demand increase of 25 per cent to 30 per cent.
Other businesses are also enjoying a strong summer.
Quick delivery service Swiggy Instamart said it is seeing a sharp rise in orders for ice cream and cold beverages.
Walmart-owned Indian e-commerce website Flipkart said demand for top-end sunscreen products jumped 40 per cent between February to May 2024 versus the previous year, with products such as sunscreen sticks proving particularly popular.
“Heatwaves made me use sunscreens very frequently, like, three to four times a day,” said Mr S. Dinesh, 27, whose job demands him to stay out in the sun during the day.
But even as the heat pushes up demand for some online products, it is causing logistical challenges as more delivery workers fall ill due to the high temperatures, said Mr Ajay Rao, chief executive of Emiza, a logistics company which counts Flipkart and Mamaearth among its customers.
“People are not able to actually cope with the outside temperatures,” he said. REUTERS

