ABOUT REFRIGERANTS
Refrigerants and Our Environment
Fluorocarbon Refrigerants
Alternative Refrigerants
Laws, Regulations & Agreements
Industry Initiatives
Glossary
CONTRACTORS / TECHNICIANS
Preparing Your Business
Servicing and Disposing of HCFC Systems
Buying Refrigerant
EQUIPMENT OWNERS
Residential Air Conditioning
Commercial Air Conditioning
Commercial Refrigeration
Industrial Process Refrigeration
NEWSROOM
Newsfeed
News Releases
Contact Us
Refrigerants and Our Environment
Refrigerants make air conditioning and refrigeration possible, which contribute enormously to our quality of life. In this equipment, refrigerants are the working fluid used to absorb and transfer heat from one part of the air conditioning or refrigeration system to another.
But in recent decades, it was found that refrigerants containing chlorine — chlorofluorocarbons (CFC) and hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFC) — when released into the atmosphere could damage the Earth’s protective ozone layer, and most also enhance the greenhouse effect, leading to accelerated global warming.
In 1987, an international environmental agreement known as the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer established requirements that began the worldwide phaseout of CFC and HCFC compounds. In response to this agreement, the United States amended the
Clean Air Act
, adding provisions to establish a schedule to phaseout the use of CFC and HCFC compounds here.
The phaseout occurs over a 40 year period that began in 1995. The phased schedules for refrigerants vary by how harmful the refrigerant is to the Earth’s ozone layer. Each chemical compound identified in the Montreal Protocol as an ozone-depleting substance also is categorized by its ozone-depleting potential (ODP) and its global-warming potential (GWP). The higher the number, the more potentially damaging the substance is to our environment. A
table of all ozone-depleting substances
shows their ODPs,
GWPs
, and CAS numbers.
The phaseout has operated by reducing in stages the amount of ozone-depleting substances that may be legally produced or imported into the U.S. CFCs were the first refrigerant on the schedule to be phased out because they have
ozone depleting potential
.
Loading . . .
Have a question?
Let us address it.
Ask a Question
View More
HVAC Industry Offers Homeowners Guidance Regarding Ozone-depleting Refrigerant Phaseout
Today's Facility Manager: The HVAC Factor: HCFC Phase Outs On The Way
AHRI Calls on EPA to Avoid "Chaos" and Modify HCFC Rule
New Law Could Freeze Out Compliant Manufacturers
View More