10m tonnes of illegal F-gas enters Europe
Industry News
10m tonnes of illegal F-gas enters Europe
Alex · 12 May 2016
One of the leading refrigerant manufacturers has claimed that over 10 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent HFCs were illegally imported into the EU in 2015.
Last year was the first year that the European Union’s phased down under the F-gas regulations came into force, allocating registered companies a quota from the total 182.5 million tonnes of F-gas allowed to be placed on the market.
Honeywell maintains that this amount has been exceeded by what it describes as illegal imports. If true, the illegal amount is equivalent to more than 5% of the total allocation and based on CO2 equivalents would represent, for example, well over 2,500 tonnes of R404A or 7,700 tonnes of R134a.
The concerns are also backed by another leading refrigerant supplier Chemours who said that they, too, had seen market indications of illegal imports.
Honeywell says it has based its estimated calculations on publicly available sources, such as export data from China, and compared these with EFCTC (Cefic) data. Honeywell has also heard of instances of companies without quota bringing in material and offering it for sale.
“As Honeywell is a significant market player, we also used our own estimations of imports of the biggest market players,” Dr Patrick Amrhein, Honeywell’s fluorine products marketing director for EMEA, told the Cooling Post. “This resulted in a figure showing material which cannot be assigned to any market player – and therefore has to come to the market outside of the quota.”
However, the real scale of the trade in illegal material could be far higher and does not include any refrigerant shipments that may have been smuggled into Europe or mis-declared.
“The amount of material coming into Europe far exceeds what should be coming in,” said Dr Amrhein. “I think 10 million tonnes is a conservative figure. Our estimation is that it is larger.”
A total of 413 companies were assigned quotas in 2015, 334 of them were new entrants. Each quota holder’s figures are audited at the end of March each year. The consequences for producers and importers exceeding their allocated quota is a deduction of double the excess from the company’s quota the following year.
Earlier this year, the Cooling Post revealed that imports of HFC refrigerants doubled in 2014, suggesting huge stockpiling in the run-up 2015 to the introduction of F-gas quotas.
