HVAC Show Gains Increasing Interest & Participation as Industry Demand Hots Up
Green Technology Features Highly at HVAC Show in Singapore
HVAC Asia 2010, held in conjunction with Refrigeration Asia 2010 aims to present the best business solutions, products and services to propel business and ventures for the South-East Asia’s HVACR industry. HVAC Asia 2010 and Refrigeration Asia 2010 mark a timely return in September 2010 in view of the recent geopolitical changes and trends that indicate that green building is here to stay. Never before in the history of mankind have leaders of the world from New York, Copenhagen, Kyoto to Macau gathered with such urgency, ambition and purpose for seeking consensus in the application of their respective influences in political and economic geography for the cooperative development of national and foreign policies for driving forward critical issues of climate change and industrial development.
As much as climate change is a hot issue, the burgeoning human populations that places greater pressures on the ecosystem, have reached a scale where abrupt global environmental change can be expected and that demands solutions. And in all of this, the role that the built environment exerts becomes ever more crucial. It is one of the manmade environments, along with agriculture, that most alters Earth’s geophysical processes. With all the changes afoot today in both the real estate economy and national governments, the question in the minds of many is on how to develop and cater for emerging sustainable development issues.
These issues would be discussed by leading experts and industry captains
at the HVAC Asia 2010 Industry Conference. The conference is all geared
to address three significant sectors covering sustainable development
issues i.e. (a) current developments, (b) efficient use of energy and
(c) performance optimisation alternatives that include topics such as
building green cities – a reality in the making, how the $54 billion
HVAC industry supply chain affects climate change, integrating HVAC structures between contractor and the builder, the IECC (International Energy Conservation Code – what it means to the industry and businesses, maximizing value and minimizing costs in green buildings, HCFC22 phase out, retrofit and the future of refrigerants and much, much more.




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