Refrigerants: Ways to Reduce Their Environmental Impact – GWC Mag

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A recent report by the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service found that global temperatures from February 2023 to January 2024 averaged 1.52°C above the preindustrial baseline. For the first 12-month period in history, global warming exceeded the 1.5°C target set forth in the Paris Accord.

Carbon dioxide (CO2) is the most important greenhouse gas, and long-term climate stabilization requires cutting net emissions of carbon dioxide to zero. Curbing release of other compounds, known collectively as “short-lived climate pollutants” (SLCPs), is also necessary. SLCPs, which include methane, black carbon, and hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), have much shorter atmospheric lifespans than carbon dioxide. But pound for pound, they trap much more heat. Action on SLCPs can buy critical time to adapt our housing stock, infrastructure, and agricultural systems.

HFCs are used as refrigerants and foam-blowing agents. Their warming effect is expressed as their Global Warming Potential, or GWP, over 20- and 100-year time frames. R-410A, the HFC blend used in most U.S. heat pumps and central air conditioners, has a 20-year GWP of 4340. That means a pound of R-410A released into the atmosphere today will cause 4340 times as much warming over the next 20 years as a pound of CO2. Because its atmospheric half-life is relatively short, its 100-year GWP is lower but still more than 2000 times that of CO2.

HFCs are of particular concern for two reasons. One is that demand for air conditioning—and thus demand for refrigerants—is increasing, driven by warming and rising incomes in the Global South. Another is that heat pumps, which are central to efforts to decarbonize home heating, require refrigerants to operate.

Efforts to reduce refrigerant emissions from heat pumps and air conditioners have focused largely on HVAC manufacturers and technicians. These HVAC-centered strategies, while crucial, will miss important opportunities. A more comprehensive approach…

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