F-Gas Regulation

F-gas phase down

The F-Gas Regulation was implemented by the European Union to reduce the environmental impact of fluorinated gases.

Since 2006 the F-Gas Regulation (EC) No 842/2006 has been governing the use of fluorinated gases (f-gases) in systems, such as air-conditioning, cooling or fire-extinguishing systems. This legislation specifies the required safety measures and competencies (e.g. leakage tests, personnel training and certification). The reason why atmospheric emissions must be kept within limits is that the heat-absorbing properties of fluorinated hydrocarbons contribute to the greenhouse effect and global climate warming.

The amended F-Gas Regulation (EU) No 517/2014 came into effect on January 1, 2015. The goal is that by 2030 only 21 percent of the original 2015 quantity of fluorinated gases will still be in use. The updated regulation includes the reduction of f-gases placed on the market as well as the restriction on new equipment and service products using f-gases. This will help to reduce the emission of f-gases from 182.5 M tons of CO2 equivalent in 2015 to 38.3 M tons of CO2 equivalent in 2030.

On March 30th, 2023, the EU-Parliament agreed to the intensified regulations regarding PFAS (per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances) in refrigeration and air conditioning equipment over the next five years. This will lead to more restriction and bans. For example, no new stationary chiller with PFAS refrigerants will be allowed after 2027 amongst other changes that will impact many industries. It signals a major move away from synthetic gases and towards natural alternatives.

Ammonia – your natural choice

Fluorinated gases have a definite disadvantage: they contribute massively to the greenhouse effect, i.e. to global warming. This is reflected in various legal instruments, such as the F-Gas Regulation, in bans on refilling certain types of refrigerants (such as R22), in the national and international CO2 reduction targets (Kyoto Protocol etc.) or in specifications for the protection of the ozone layer (Montreal Protocol).

With ammonia as a natural refrigerant, you have a future-proof choice, providing the right temperature for change. With a GWP of zero this cost-effective refrigerant is a natural choice for a greener future. Our experts know how to support you with our safe and effective products and solutions for heating and cooling, including long-standing expertise with the natural refrigerant ammonia.

GEA Natural refrigerants - NH₃ CO₂ HC

Webinar: Natural refrigerants

Join GEA’s on-demand Cooling Club webinar on Natural Refrigerants, entitled “Back to the future – Refrigeration technology with natural refrigerants in times of climate change”. Learn from the experts why to make the switch from F-Gas refrigerants to the more environmentally friendly, future-proof, energy-efficient, natural refrigerants such as Ammonia and CO2.
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