Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

EPA proposes reduction of refrigeran­t gases

- MATTHEW DALY

WASHINGTON — In the first Biden administra­tion rule aimed at combating climate change, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency is proposing to phase down production and use of hydrofluor­ocarbons, highly potent greenhouse gases commonly used in refrigerat­ors and air conditione­rs.

The proposed rule follows through on a law Congress passed in December authorizin­g a 15-year phaseout of hydrofluor­ocarbons. The new rule is intended to decrease U.S. production and use of the gases by 85% over the next 15 years, part of a global phaseout intended to slow climate change.

The gases are considered a major driver of global warming and are being targeted worldwide. President Joe Biden has pledged to embrace a 2016 global agreement to reduce them.

“With this proposal, EPA is taking another significan­t step under President Biden’s ambitious agenda to address the climate crisis,” EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan said in a statement Monday. “By phasing down HFCs, which can be hundreds to thousands of times more powerful than carbon dioxide at warming the planet, EPA is taking a major action to help keep global temperatur­e rise in check.”

The phase-down of hydrofluor­ocarbons is widely supported by the business community, Regan said, and “will help promote American leadership in innovation and manufactur­ing of new climatesaf­e products. Put simply, this action is good for our planet and our economy.”

A huge pandemic relief and spending bill passed by Congress in December, and signed by former President Donald Trump, directs EPA to sharply reduce production and use of the gases. The measure won wide support in both parties and was hailed as the most significan­t climate change law in at least a decade.

Besides targeting hydrofluor­ocarbons, the so-called American Innovation and Manufactur­ing Act also promotes technologi­es to capture and store carbon dioxide produced by power and manufactur­ing plants and calls for reductions in diesel emissions by buses and other vehicles.

Delaware Sen. Tom Carper, a Democrat who chairs the Senate Environmen­t and Public Works Committee, praised the EPA rule and said the United States was joining the rest of the world in reducing use of hydrofluor­ocarbons, helping to avoid the worst effects of global warming.

“Passing the AIM Act was a momentous climate achievemen­t that will help save our planet, and today we are one step closer to its benefits being a reality,” Carper said in a statement.

Carper and Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., pushed for the EPA proposal, which they said would give U.S. companies the regulatory certainty needed to produce “next-generation” coolants as an alternativ­e to hydrofluor­ocarbons. Both men represent states that are home to chemical companies that produce the alternativ­e refrigeran­ts.

The hydrofluor­ocarbon provision was supported by an unusual coalition that included major environmen­tal and business groups, including the National Associatio­n of Manufactur­ers, American Chemistry Council and the Air-Conditioni­ng, Heating and Refrigerat­ion Institute, which represents companies that make residentia­l and commercial air conditione­rs, water heaters and commercial refrigerat­ion equipment.

The industry has long been moving to use of alternativ­e refrigeran­ts and was pushing for a federal standard to avoid a patchwork of state laws and regulation­s.

David Doniger, a senior climate and clean-energy official with the Natural Resources Defense Council, said the EPA rule will deliver “enormous public health and climate benefits to all Americans.”

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