I looked at this in detail several months ago as part of a charging product I was working on.
Most of the connectors I looked at specified the current on all terminals at 1.5A. The truth is that even in a 2A charging product, only two of the terminals would be at 2A.
Here's a product spec for a Type A that states the specs with all circuits at 1.5A.
http://www.molex.com/pdm_docs/ps/PS-48037-001.pdfSince this is not the way you'll use the part, it will likely work fine at 2A. I go through the calculations below.
For example assume a contact resistance of 30mOhms. Taken from the datasheet link above.
A connector at 1.5A dissipating power in all 4 circuits would dissipate:
P=4*R*I
2=4*20mOhm*1.5A
2=0.18W
A connector at 2.0A dissipating power in only 2 circuits would dissipate:
P=2*R*I
2=2*20mOhm*2.0A
2=0.16W
In my testing I didn't see any problems with the connectors getting too warm.
The real issue will be if your product requires approval by a listing agency such as UL or ETL. You can use the connector, but you'll then have to submit the part for testing, and pay the appropriate fee, unless you can get the manufacturer to do it for you.