Brazil, Mexico and Argentina kept recording the largest volume of sales with respectively 5.1m, 1.9m and 1m of both packaged and central plant AC systems sold in 2023.
The Brazilian market performed strongly in 2023, where buoyant economic growth, falling inflation and interest rates and weather extremes boosted the demand. More specifically, residential AC increased after stock levels depleted, especially by the end of 2023, because of disruptions at the production sites in Manaus. Success in the residential and light commercial Brazilian markets is heavily dependent on the availability of production sites in the country. Most of the manufacturing facilities, which are, in reality, assembling sites for imported components, are in the free-tax area of Manaus, Amazonas. Producing locally allows for more aggressive pricing. In commercial AC, where most of the units are imported, logistics is the most important factor.
Record-high foreign investments, favoured by the nearshoring policies of the main American corporations, stimulated economic growth in Mexico and gave a push to commercial AC especially. A gradual fall in inflation also contributed to improving consumer confidence and spending despite the high interest rates in 2023. The Mexican minisplit market grows substantially with the emergence of a new multi split segment. but inverter conversion is still slow. On the Applied business, the sales of chillers jumped, stimulated by investments in the industrial market and in data centres.
Despite unfavourable economic circumstances, with GDP falling by more than 2% in 2023, almost all market segments grew since the deep slump experienced during the pandemic. The residential sector remains by far the biggest with huge high wall split market, with sales being close to 900,000 units in 2023, Argentina still has a significant windows market and also a large portables market. Both the light commercial and the VRF markets grew in 2023, reaching around USD 45 million. Chillers represent a relatively small segment in Argentina, with the market reaching about USD 13 million in 2023.
Most countries in Latin America are exposed to climate change and the increasing risk of weather extremes. Combined with the El Nino phenomenon, climate change has been boosting the adoption of air conditioning.
However, we observe huge discrepancies in terms of penetration of AC across the countries and therefore, different levels of maturity on the various product segments we cover:
- portable and mobile air conditioners,
- splits and VRF,
- rooftop and indoor packaged,
- chillers and airside.
While the market for window units declines, minisplit sales increase and an emerging market for multi splits and residential mini VRF expands rapidly. Inverter adoption progresses fast.
The light commercial market, including VRF and rooftops, continues to recover from the post-pandemic slump. Maxi VRF adoption is further expanding, especially in mixed DX & chiller water applications. The applied market records a trend toward smaller, modular units and air-cooled units. The main reason reported was shorter lead times for these products compared to the large capacity ones.
Inverter technology is raising in popularity in the chiller segment overall, as concerns over energy savings and rising operating costs grow. The same is true in the packaged AC segment where the ratio of split inverter has now passed the 40% threshold in all the countries in the region. In Brazil, the new rules approved by the Minister of Mines and Energy in 2022 go even further by phasing out on-off residential air conditioners from 2026.
Other central American countries follow RTCA standards. These rules make labelling stricter and set minimum energy efficiency standards for air conditioners. 16 SEER is a general minimum required of any AC unit to be allowed to be imported. The aim of the regulation is to prevent poor quality imports.
On the environmental impact front, a timid move away from high GWP refrigerants starts to be seen with R32 benefitting the most from it. This is in Mexico where the change is more noticeable: 38% of the single split market already ran on R32 in 2023. And this despite the fact that the Mexican government has not translated the objectives to reduce HFCs consumption into mandatory regulations yet. With no significant regulatory framework for refrigerants in most of Latin American countries, the transition to alternative fluids is slow.