Subscribe to the daily news Sign in
En
How does the COVID-19 pandemic impact on the US HVAC sector?
05 October 2020

How does the COVID-19 pandemic impact on the US HVAC sector?

According to a survey carried out by the American Institute of Architects (AIA), as an effect of COVID-19, construction activity is expected to fall in 2020 and this will likely continue in 2021. Construction activities related to hotels is predicted to fall by over 20% in 2020, by almost 8% in retail sector, by over 11% in offices, by nearly 7% in education and by 13% in the case of recreational/amusement establishments. In the current situation it is no surprise that construction activities in the public safety and healthcare facilities are expected to grow by almost 16% and over 2% respectively in 2020.

Verticals served by the HVAC&R sector have been hit at various levels of degree by the COVID-19 pandemic. Hotels, hospitality, restaurants and venues (such as live entertainment and sports), have been struggling due to concerns over contracting the virus, even after they could reopen. It is also expected that consumers will shift their spending towards alternatives such as durable goods, which in turn can have a positive effect on housing in the future.

The global health crisis triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic has caused bottlenecks in the supply chain. As manufacturing plants closed or reduced operation and staff were put on furlough, it caused logistical challenges and disrupted distributor/contractor activities which largely reduced inventories and the ability to serve customers on time. Nevertheless, a warm summer with above average temperatures sustained replacement demand and increased spending on home improvement. This was facilitated by the fact that people have been forced to spend more time indoors and they also had more time at disposal to carry out DIY jobs around the house. However, while replacement activity has been very intense, the virtual standstill of new residential construction eroded any growth to the overall market demand. As a result of these combined factors, the residential market is expected to moderately fall by the end of 2020. Market growth should resume in 2021, supported by low stock.

The light commercial market has been disrupted more severely, which affected demand. Business closures, crisis of the retail and hospitality industries, fall in demand for renovations of education facilities, postponement or cancellation of projects have curtailed market demand. The first six months of the year recorded only moderate fall in sales of VRF as the market was still invoicing projects commencing in the pre-COVID period. However, in the second half of 2020 a larger fall in sales is expected.

By the end of the summer the impact of the economic crisis caused by the spread of COVID-19 has not yet fully translated into a sizeable decline in chiller sales. The heavy commercial market usually reacts with a time lag to economic downturns as projects have a longer timeline, especially in the case of high complexity systems. However, the general expectation is for a progressive decline of this market towards the end of the year and the downturn to possibly continue in 2021.

In the short term, the uncertainty generated by the volatile evolution of pandemic and the approaching presidential election will very likely depress sales of all chiller types to most verticals except for healthcare, IT and data centres.

In the longer term, providing that interest rates remain low and the pandemic is soon contained, the market could bounce back, although the bulk of the investments may shift significantly across verticals. The contingent measures of social distancing introduced with the spread of COVID-19 appear to have triggered structural changes in office space utilisation, as well as the retail, leisure and hospitality sectors. Therefore, it is likely that climate control requirements in these vertical will change significantly with a growing emphasis on Indoor Air Quality (IAQ) and improved ventilation solutions.

Nevertheless, the focus of users on efficiency has not changed and new refrigerants continue to be central in the product development of the suppliers albeit these are yet to reach the mainstream market.

Please contact wmi@bsria.co.uk to enquire about the latest release of COVID-19 related US market data.

Related tags: chiller, HVAC
Share
Get the daily refrigeration briefing
Trusted by 3,000+ refrigeration professionals worldwide
By subscribing, you create a free Refindustry account and agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.
No spam. Only industry-relevant news.
Unsubscribe anytime.

Related news

HVACi says 50% of claimed HVAC systems were repairable
HVAC Investigators (HVACi) has released its 2025 Annual Claims Report, saying half of the HVAC and refrigeration equipment included in 2025 claims could be repaired and another 20% was functioning ...
14 May 2026
Daikin faces HVAC pricing lawsuits in the United States
Daikin Industries said the company and several U.S. subsidiaries have been named as defendants in four lawsuits filed in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan. T...
14 May 2026
Johnson Controls acquires Nantum AI to expand OpenBlue controls
Johnson Controls has acquired Nantum AI, a New York-based company specializing in AI algorithms for energy savings, system controls and operational efficiency. The acquisition adds proprietary AI-d...
28 Apr 2026
European heat pump sales rise 17% in Q1 2026
Heat pump sales in 11 European countries rose 17% in the first quarter of 2026 compared with the same period in 2025, according to data from the European Heat Pump Association. Around 575,000 units...
05 May 2026
Future Market Insights sees heat pump market at USD 167.4bn by 2036
Future Market Insights said the global heat pump market is projected to reach USD 61.7 billion in 2026 and grow at a CAGR of 10.5% through 2036, reaching USD 167.4 billion. The company linked t...
05 May 2026
Johnson Controls expands AI factory design guides with air-cooled c...
Johnson Controls has launched the second guide in its AI Factory Reference Design Guide Series, focused on air-cooled chillers for data center thermal management. The guide follows the company’...
11 May 2026