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Article Title: Understanding The California Global Warming Solutions Act (AB 32)
Author: Daniel Stouffer
Category: Regulatory Compliance, Business, Environment
Word Count: 760
Keywords: fugitive emissions, CARB, AB 32, refrigerant management, 
sustainability resource planning, verisae
Author's Email Address: [email protected]
Article Source: http://www.articlemarketer.com
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Understanding the Relationship Between the California Global Warming Solutions 
Act (AB 32) and the Stationary Equipment Refrigerant Management Program

The California Global Warming Solutions Act (AB 32), first passed in 2006 with 
additional early actions taking effect in 2010, is a broad and comprehensive 
directive with the goal of reducing greenhouse gasses (GHGs) by approximately 
25% by the year 2020. This objective of the early action stems from increases 
in carbon equivalent emissions in California since 1990. The objective of these 
early actions and amendments to AB 32 is to eliminate emission sources of GHGs 
and reduce overall emissions to 1990 levels.

As part of the California Global Warming Solutions Act (AB 32) the Air 
Resources Board (ARB) has approved an early action measure to reduce 
high-global warming potential (GWP) greenhouse gas (GHGs) emissions by 
establishing new legislation and defining requirements related to improved 
monitoring of AC/HVAC systems, enforcement of regulations, reporting of 
refrigerant usage, and recovery, recycling, or destruction of high-GWP 
refrigerant gases.

The greenhouse gasses (GHGs) as defined by the California's AB 32 are identical 
to those gasses identified in the Kyoto Protocol. These gases are already being 
regulated, monitored, and managed by many other countries around the World. In 
addition to carbon dioxide (CO2), which is the most widely known GHG, the 
following gasses are also defined as GHGs with high global warming potential 
(GWP) carbon equivalent emissions by the AB 32 legislation:

* Methane (CH4): a byproduct of waste decomposition, and natural geological 
phenomena; the majority of methane is derived from natural gas drilling.

* Nitrous Oxide (N2O): a pollutant created by industrial processes, motor 
vehicle exhaust, and industrial air pollutants reacting with the atmosphere; 
similar to methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O) is often attributed to 
agriculture and waste disposal.

* Sulfur Hexafluoride (SF6): a gas used for various electrical applications, 
including gas insulated switchgear. Sulfur Hexafluoride is also used for 
experimental applications.

* Perfluorocarbons (PFCs) and Hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs): a collection of 
commonly used refrigerant and aerosol gasses with a wide variety of other 
commercial applications. CFCs and HCFCs are considered Ozone Depleting 
Substances (ODSs), as defined in title VI of the US Clean Air Act (Section 608).

The California EPA's Air Resources Board (CARB) has developed a complex and 
highly detailed system of greenhouse gas management for refrigerant gasses, 
known as the Stationary Equipment Refrigerant Management Program, and stricter 
standards for new or existing refrigeration systems installation and ongoing 
maintenance. The refrigerant management programs details requirements for 
automated monitoring of systems, detailed usage and service book keeping, and 
the credentials to manage related to service technicians and their recovery 
equipment.

The proposed Stationary Equipment Refrigerant Management Program, which 
integrates two AB 32 early action measures, addresses the detailed monitoring 
and management of the PFCs and HCFCs noted above and includes tracking 
requirements for new and existing commercial and industrial refrigeration 
systems. In draft form today with implementation by January 2010, the 
refrigerant management program will require leak monitoring, tracking, and 
reporting of warming potential (GWP) refrigerants. First phase, roll-out is 
expected to target AC/HVAC systems containing 2,000 pounds or more of 
refrigerant gas.

CARB is charged with the monitoring GHGs and high GWP gasses, as well and the 
eventual development and enforcement of specific and quantitative new 
regulations covering carbon related emissions which refrigerant management with 
the tracking, reporting, cylinder management, and gas recovery for stationary 
refrigerant and air conditioning (AC) systems all becoming key integral parts.

The CARB proposal could also involve fines for mismanagement of refrigerant 
record keeping, intentional venting of systems, and the inability to regularly 
submit the required refrigerant usage reports. The CARB enforces Section 608 of 
the US Clean Air Act in specific and quantifiable terms in cooperation of the 
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), as the existing national and state 
refrigerant regulations are applied to leaks, emissions, venting, and the 
recovery processes.

The overall intent of CARB's strategy is to monitor and reduce the introduction 
of man-made GHGs and high GWP gasses into the atmosphere, as called for in the 
California Global Warming Solutions ACT (AB 32) in effect since 2006 with 
tighter controls, monitoring, and overall regulations becoming enforceable by 
early 2010.

Refrigerant management and reporting is a key consideration from a business 
strategic perspective related to asset management, from the effects such high 
GWP gases have on the environment, and from the relationship between 
refrigerants, greenhouse gases, and carbon equivalent emission. 

As organizations with AC/HVAC systems containing refrigerant gas of 50 pounds 
or more will soon find out, the effective monitoring, management of data, and 
systematic reporting of refrigerant usage will be key to business success in 
our emerging carbon economy.

Verisae develops clean-tech software in the emerging category of Sustainability 
Resource Planning (SRP). Verisae has dozens of customers worldwide, 20,000 
sites under management, 2.1 millions assets serviced, and billions of pounds of 
CO2e tracked. Learn more at http://www.Verisae.com/articles
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