Refrigerants banned from use as of 1/1/20 Business News The use of virgin fluorinated greenhouse gases (HFCS) with a GWP of 2500 or more to service or maintain refrigeration equipment with a charge of 40 tonnes CO2 equivalent or more is prohibited from 1 January 2020. Share This Story: Copy to clipboard Copied 3 new service bans since 1/1/20 The use of virgin fluorinated greenhouse gases (HFCS) with a GWP of 2500 or more to service or maintain refrigeration equipment with a charge of 40 tonnes CO2 equivalent or more is prohibited from 1 January 2020. The figure below shows what this threshold means for some common refrigerants currently in widespread use. 40 tonnes = <10.2kg R404A 10kg R507A 14.6kg R422D There is no restriction on the servicing or the long-term use of these systems, other than the prohibition on using virgin refrigerants after 1 January 2020. There are no current plans to prohibit the use of these systems in the future, nor restrict the use of serviceability of systems with a charge lower than the 40 tonnes CO2 equivalent. Exemptions from this service ban apply to military equipment and also where equipment is intended for applications designed to cool products to below -50C. An extension of the use of fluorinated greenhouse gases with a GWP of 2500 or more applies until 1 January 2030 for: Reclaimed refrigerant used for the service and the maintenance of existing refrigeration equipment, provided the refrigerants have been labelled in accordance with Article 12(6). Note this is for existing equipment only – reclaimed refrigerants cannot be used in new equipment being installed. Recycled refrigerant used for the service or maintenance of existing refrigeration equipment provided they have been recovered from such equipment. Such recycled gases may only be used by undertaking for which the recovery was carried out. This means that the service company who carried out the recovery of the used refrigerant can recycle the recovered charge and re-use on the same systems, or the end user can retain the recycled refrigerant to re-use on their systems. See REFCOM TB023 Refrigerant Recovery for further definitions and clarification on the recovery, reclamation and recycling processes. See REFCOM TB046 Service & Product Bans 2020 for specific product bans which came into effect on 1 January 2020. Older refrigerants: CFSs and HCFCs – Ozone depleting substances Government advice on ozone depleting substances and the ODS regulation that covered the phase out of these substances has been withdrawn from Government websites because the date(s) of the stages of phase out are now historical and the regulation covering these substances was superseded by the F-Gas Regulations in terms of leak checking and minimizing emissions of the refrigerants containing fluorine, whether they be CFC, HCFC or HFC. CFCs have been prohibited from use since 1995 in the UK and regulatory text covering CFCs has been completely removed from publicly accessible Government libraries now. HCFCs such as R22 and R502 have been prohibited from use in new equipment since 2001 and since the 1st January 2015 the use of reclaimed or recycled HCFC refrigerants was also banned. It is still permissible to use equipment that runs with these refrigerants, and those systems must be leak tested at least annually in accordance with the F-Gas Regulations requirements, but there are restrictions on what work can be carried out on equipment containing CFCs/HCFCs. It is against the law for anybody to connect a manifold set to a system charged with a CFC/HCFC unless they are carrying out a decant of the refrigerant charge to allow for the destruction of the CFC/HCFC. If gauges are connected to a system and CFC/HCFC refrigerant is present, then that charge must be recovered and the refrigerant sent for proper destruction. If equipment using a CFC/HCFC requires a component replacing from within the refrigerant circuit that requires the decanting of the refrigerant charge, then that charge must be sent for destruction after recovery and the system would have to be charged with an alternative suitable refrigerant after replacement of the faulty component. It is absolutely prohibited to put the recovered CFC/HCFC back into the system upon completion of the repair work. (Sourced from REFCOM technical bulletin TB/047) Share This Story: Copy to clipboard Copied Other Stories You May Be Interested In... Cold Rooms How to reduce energy costs for your cold room ... Read Article Cold Rooms Types of Cold Room Refrigeration: A Quick Guide ... Read Article Cold Rooms What Are the Key Benefits of Using Commercial Cold Rooms? ... Read Article