rb1957,
Classic distraction. Eliminating a directly harmful pollutant has far greater priority than the CO2 increase resulting from the fix, as you correctly state. Clearly refrigeration and A/C contribute to emissions, but a percentage increase there is not very much of the total carbon picture. Anyway refrigeration probably gives a net carbon reduction by greatly reducing food spoilage, thereby reducing demand on the very carbon intensive ag industry.
TBE,
You need to disabuse yourself of the obviously false notion that the mitigations to carbon emissions will create more carbon emissions than the problem they are designed to fix. Seriously, it’s fake news. We are talking about one-time infrastructure changes, compared to continuous ongoing FF burning.
"If you don't have time to do the job right the first time, when are you going to find time to repair it?"