Multiplying wattages by time is not realistic. In 1963 we bought a large GE white refrigerator, and an 18 cubic foot GE white freezer. Later, we took a month long trip to California, and the total energy bill for that month was less than $10.
The refrigerator gave excellent service until 2018, and was replaced with a more efficient GE, white, to improve the sales value of the house, expected to take place in the next decade. 55 years of reliable service.
The house was sold last year, with the refrigerator, but the freezer went to our grand daughter's house. 61 years, and never serviced, just kept the coils clean, and waxed the outside every decade. The insulation on the freezer was so good that in a 3 day power failure, door un opened, there was still frost on the bottoms of the shelves. It ran for several hours before stopping, so about 3 hours at rated wattage was all it needed for 3 days.
We bought beef a quarter of a steer at a time, so a lot in that freezer, plus we had a garden plot.
A land developer gave me permission to pick all the apples I wanted from an orchard that he was going to bulldoze in a week, my wife and 2 boys, plus two friends children picked a huge amount of apples, I bought a 15 year old Montgomery Ward 20 cu ft chest type, and filled it with shallow wooden boxes of apples. A timer turned the power on 15 minutes per day, and kept the temperature at 34 degrees, we checked the thermometer every time we removed a box of apples. So the max it ran was 7 hours a MONTH, and often when I checked with the timer on, it was not running.
After that freezer was empty, I sold it for what I paid for it.
Energy consumption of refrigerators is more the amount of time the door is open than many other factors. Keep the doors closed most of the time, and an old unit will be low energy use. Don't fill the land fills with working appliances, buying new that polluted the environment with their creation.
PS, I know what an absorption refrigerator is, and have not seen one in half a century. They were great for homes without electricity, and a great aunt had one until 1960. Electricity came before that, but power failures were frequent, and kerosene cheap, so it continued to be used.