Action
needed to prevent HFC-23 climate bomb from China and India
Washington, DC – China and India are expected to
release vast amounts of the chemical hydroflourocarbon-23 (HFC-23) into the
atmosphere, causing global greenhouse gas emissions to skyrocket, according to
a new report launched today by the Environmental Investigation Agency. HFC-23, a by-product in the production of a
chemical (HCFC-22) primarily used in air conditioning and refrigeration, is
14,800 times more damaging to the climate than carbon dioxide (CO2).
EIA investigators have discovered that many Chinese
and Indian facilities, despite having destruction technology readily available,
are releasing or threatening to emit the by-product unless they receive
additional financing to dispose of the chemicals. Plants that produce HCFC-22 in other
developing countries could also do the same. If this happens, it would cause
the release of more than two billion tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e ) into the atmosphere by 2020,
more than the global fleet of cars emit each year.
“Chinese and Indian companies are holding the world
hostage by threatening to set off a climate bomb if they don’t receive millions
of dollars for the destruction of the HFC-23 that they are producing,” said
Mark W. Roberts, EIA’s International Policy Advisor. “The Chinese government
has the opportunity to defuse a large portion of this ‘bomb.’ It should take
the first step toward implementing the HFC agreement made two weeks ago by
immediately mandating the destruction of HFC-23 in all Chinese plants.”
HFC-23 has been the focus for the first emission
reduction projects funded through the United Nation’s Clean Development
Mechanism (CDM). Under the UN program, incinerators for HFC-23 are installed at
19 refrigerant facilities, mostly in China and India but also in South Korea,
Argentina and Mexico, to help control the super greenhouse gas.
Destruction of HFC-23 is extremely cheap, however refrigerant
companies have made billions of dollars in windfall profits from the sale of
carbon credits, maximized through manipulation of HCFC-22 and HFC-23 production
levels. In response, the European
Emissions Trading Scheme – the world’s largest carbon market – banned the trade
of HFC-23 credits as of May 1, 2013. Other carbon markets have followed suit, resulting
in the collapse of the HFC-23 credit market.
“Any venting of HFC-23 is a monumental scandal,
given that destroying HFC-23 is about the cheapest climate mitigation available
and the billions already made by these companies through the CDM,” said Clare
Perry, EIA’s Senior Campaigner. “The EU
is considering legislation that will mandate destruction of all HFC-23
by-product and we strongly urge China, India and all other countries with
HCFC-22 facilities to do the same and ensure all of these plants bring HFC-23
emissions down to zero.”
HCFC-22
producers in developed countries, including chemical giants Dupont, Honeywell
and Arkema, share responsibility for ongoing HFC-23 emissions. Best available
technologies and maintenance practices allow 99.99 percent of HFC-23 to be
destroyed and there is no excuse for continued HFC-23 emissions from these
companies.
The EIA report is being launched as the Montreal
Protocol meeting kicks off in Bangkok and two weeks after the Chinese and US
governments agreed to work together to phase down HFCs using the Montreal
Protocol process.
“While we applaud the US and China for taking a step
in the right direction on HFCs, immediate action to control HFC-23 will give
life to the words of the Agreement” said Alexander von Bismarck, EIA’s Executive
Director. “Almost all of the HFC-23 emissions in the United States are attributed
to just two facilities owned by Honeywell and Dupont; these companies should
lead by example and destroy all of their HFC-23.”
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