Why ACs are catching fire as India gets hotter

Team TOI PlusTIMESOFINDIA.COM
Jun 5, 2026 | 21:05 IST
Image: AI

The recent fire tragedy in the capital has revived concerns over AC-related blazes in Indian cities. The danger is rarely the appliance alone: extreme heat, nonstop use, weak wiring, poor servicing, unsafe buildings and blocked exits can turn a small electrical fault deadly

A deadly fire at a south Delhi bed-and-breakfast has put the spotlight back on a danger that returns every summer: air-conditioner-related fires. Investigators are still examining what caused the June 3 blaze at Flourish Stay Bed & Breakfast in Hauz Rani, Malviya Nagar, where 21 people were killed. One line of inquiry is a commercial LPG cylinder in the basement kitchen. Another is a possible faulty AC in the ground-floor restaurant.

It would be premature to say an AC caused the Delhi fire. But the case has raised a larger question: as Indian cities get hotter and ACs run for longer hours, are homes, hotels, hospitals and small commercial buildings safe enough to handle that cooling load?
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