cool
ko͞ol/
verb
gerund or present participle: cooling
become or cause to become less hot.
I'm not going to argue about the semantics. But every method of cooling you can think of involves removing heat via air (or sometimes liquid).
My last try to fix your ignorance. Search for the meaning of the word
CONTEXT, that will give you some small chance to understand what I did meant. Other than that, I am helpless, sorry.
Im siding with jimmothy - he knows enough about how removing hot air works to reduce operating temperatures of hardware (assuming the air flowing is in a lower temperature than your exhaust, either by A/C or simply cooler outside air) that to say that removing heat isnt cooling is silly.
lets rephrase the question: BEFORE and AFTER adding the blower to remove hot air, what is the difference in heat production (aka power draw) that the building can handle under the same conditions as before? obviously theres a dozen factors like placement and direction and power draw of the blower, but a rough number is enough. can you handle ~30kW more equipment than before? 50kW?