Economically sustainable - for mother nature

The refrigeration and air conditioning industries effect the environment all over the world, both directly with emissions and indirectly with their power consumption. The use of ozone destructive CFC's is not permitted in the developed industrial countries and the fade out for HCFC's is already decided. The discussion about the global warming effecting HFC refrigerants, however, is still in progress. These so called replacement refrigerants, like bromine and chlorine free HFC's, do not harm the ozone layer but have unfavourably high global warming potential. For this reason, the 1997 Kyoto Protocol called for a worldwide reduction of these greenhouse gases. Even new alternative refrigerants and blends like R134a, R404A and R507, each of them being HFC's, are less attractive for forward looking applications due to their relatively high greenhouse effect.

Against the backdrop of global efforts to protect the environment, natural refrigerants are the obvious choice as a sustainable and ecological alternative to HFC's. All natural refrigerants occur in nature's material cycle even without human interference. They do not contribute to the depletion of the ozone layer and have no significant influence to the greenhouse effect substantially less then synthetic refrigerants like HFC's. The natural refrigerant ammonia and carbon dioxide are highly important to the economy. Natural refrigerants have been used in food production and storage for more than 100 years. In recent times, technological progress and innovations have added new fields of application.

For all these reasons we are convinced that the natural refrigerants ammonia and carbon dioxide will be the most important for the future....................
Find this at http://www.grasso-global.com/Refrigerants.26.0.html

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