Dealing with a cool two percent of our greenhouse gas emissions

Dealing with a cool two percent of our greenhouse gas emissions

Servicing

Cool-Safe has been accredited as a priority product stewardship scheme under the Waste Minimisation Act. The scheme has been designed to reduce harm from refrigerants and other synthetic greenhouse gases. The scheme remains voluntary until regulations are in place.

In New Zealand, synthetic greenhouse gases (HCFCs, HFCs, CFCs, HFOs) are primarily used as refrigerants. According to the Ministry for the Environment, the HFC portion makes up around two percent of our total greenhouse gas emissions.
While incredibly useful, many of these refrigerant gases are thousands of times more potent for climate change than C02 and can also damage the ozone layer.

Right now, New Zealand has limited regulatory levers to pull to manage the sale, management and disposal of these gases in an environmentally responsible way.

In 2020, refrigerants and other synthetic greenhouse gases were declared a ‘priority product’ under the Waste Minimisation Act. This means they have been identified as one of six priority products to put regulations in place to encourage all-of-sector engagement with effective industry initiatives to reduce waste and harm. Government consulted on proposed regulations at the end of 2022. Most of the key industry bodies responded.

The Trust for the Destruction of Synthetic Refrigerants (the Trust) operates the Cool-Safe scheme. For over 30 years the environmental trust has led the managed destruction of NZ’s end-of-use synthetic refrigerants. To date, the Trust has prevented more than 1,496,000 tonnes (of carbon dioxide equivalent) greenhouse gas emissions, in addition to 39,800 tonnes of avoided ozone depletion (as at 31 March 2024).

In July 2024 the Minister for the Environment accredited Cool-Safe as a product stewardship scheme, designed to improve sector management for refrigerants and other synthetic gases. The application and design of the scheme was collaborative, and industry led via a working group from across the sector.

The scheme remains voluntary until regulations are in place. “While Cabinet is still to approve regulations, this is a huge step in the right direction. Cool-Safe continues to build and develop the product stewardship programme offering which already exists, with Cool-Safe’s introduction of financial incentives paid for waste refrigerants, making it easier for the sector o recover their refrigerant through our free door to door courier and cylinder services. Working with industry makes a lot of sense and supports an easier transition to regulation in due course”, says Chair for the Trust, Richard Lauder. “Under this scheme, we could see harmful HFCs, CFCs, HCFCs and HFOs effectively eliminated from our country, a climate win equivalent to getting all cars off Christchurch roads.

Regulated Product Stewardship Schemes create professional management processes within industry for the benefit of our community and environment.”

Following on from the successful launch of Tyrewise we hope to see regulations in the pipeline soon for this important sector.

You can read more about Cool-Safe at www.coolsafe.org.nz or the Product Stewardship Scheme at https://3r.co.nz/news/our-work-refrigerant-recovery-project/.

Publishing Information
Page Number:
1
Related Articles
Cult-favourite Aussie car care brand in New Zealand
Kiwi car lovers can now get their hands on Australia’s most prized car care products, Bowden’s Own, a family-owned  business known for its high-quality, handmade products that don’t shy away from...
Servicing 4WDs is different
Mud plus dirt, dust, sand and more mud – that’s what makes servicing 4WD’s more challenging than servicing standard vehicles, at least for those 4WD vehicles that venture further offroad than the...
Ageing cars – the growth engine of an industry
On a global level, the average use of vehicles is increasing significantly. The automotive aftermarket is benefiting from this as the demand for maintenance and spare parts increases. At the same...