Tuesday, July 22, 2014

Fwd: News Release: EPA Warning: Recharging Air Conditioners with Wrong Refrigerant Poses Injury and Fire Risks



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: U.S. EPA <usaepa@service.govdelivery.com>
Date: Tue, Jul 22, 2014 at 8:09 AM
Subject: News Release: EPA Warning: Recharging Air Conditioners with Wrong Refrigerant Poses Injury and Fire Risks
To: iammejtm@gmail.com


CONTACT:

Enesta Jones

Jones.enesta@epa.gov

202-564-7873

202-564-4355

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

July 22, 2014

 

EPA Warning: Recharging Air Conditioners with Wrong Refrigerant Poses Injury and Fire Risks

 

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is cautioning homeowners, manufacturers of propane-based refrigerants, home improvement contractors and air conditioning technicians of the safety hazards related to the use of propane in existing motor vehicle and home air conditioning systems.

 

A number of refrigerants with "22a" or "R-22a" in the name contain highly flammable hydrocarbons, such as propane. These refrigerants are being marketed to consumers seeking to recharge existing home and motor vehicle air conditioning systems that were not designed to use propane or other flammable refrigerants. These refrigerants have never been submitted to EPA for review of their health and environmental impacts and are not approved for use in existing air conditioning systems.

 

Using propane-based refrigerant in an air conditioner that is not designed for flammable refrigerants poses a threat to homeowners as well as service technicians because systems that are recharged with "22a" refrigerants can catch fire or explode resulting in injury and property damage. EPA is investigating instances where propane-based refrigerants have been marketed and used as a substitutes for HCFC-22 (R-22) and will take enforcement actions where appropriate.

 

More information about R-22a and alternatives for air conditioning: http://www.epa.gov/ozone/snap/r22a.html


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Jeremy Tobias Matthews

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