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Residential Air Conditioning A Working Example
A Worldwide Perspective
Residential Air Conditioning (A/C) provides comfort to millions of
homes worldwide. According to the Air Conditioning and Refrigeration
Institute, there are over 60 million air conditioners using
fluorocarbons in the US alone. People lead more productive and

Residences use air conditioning systems with an external fan and an
internal refrigeration unit.
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healthy lives due to controlled temperatures and humidity in homes.
During periods of unusually hot weather, air conditioning has been
credited with saving lives. Three system types are available in the
global residential market: window room air conditioners, ductless
split air conditioning systems and ducted central air conditioning
systems.
Environmental Considerations for Residential Air Conditioning
The vast majority of residential air conditioners use
hydrochlorofluorocarbon 22 (HCFC-22). This refrigerant will be
available for many years, although the Montreal Protocol dictates its
eventual phaseout. The primary HCFC-22 replacement in the US
residential a/c market is hydrofluorocarbon 410A (HFC-410A).
Hydrocarbons, such as propane, are also possible choices but their
inherent flammability and associated risk mitigation cost are issues
for use in residences. HFCs and the continuing availability of HCFC-22
will allow manufacturers to provide the most energy efficient
equipment. This reduces energy consumption and the resulting
emissions of CO2 (carbon dioxide).
Life Cycle Climate Performance (LCCP)
Life-Cycle Climate Performance is expressed as kilograms of CO2.
This includes both the greenhouse gas emissions ("direct effect") and
the energy consumed ("indirect effect"). Air conditioning system
operation is energy intensive and, consequently, dominates the LCCP.
However, it is also important to minimize system leakage and
refrigerant loss during installation, commissioning, servicing,
decommissioning at the end of life, and ultimate equipment disposal.
Other considerations include the system cost and the safety of users,
service technicians and the public.
The direct warming effect due to refrigerant emissions for residential
air conditioning systems with fluorocarbon refrigerants is less than
5% of total LCCP. System efficiency is much more critical to LCCP
than the direct refrigerant emissions. The direct effect of a
hydrocarbon such as propane is very small but its use requires
significant fire risk reduction investment. A study by a US equipment
manufacturer indicated that hydrocarbon use would increase residential
ducted system cost by over 30% (Treadwell, 1994). This additional
cost was necessary to reduce the risk of fire. This can be
accomplished by, inter alia, isolating all brazed joints from the
indoor air, placing all electrical components in a separate sealed
control box and utilizing a secondary loop to isolate all flammable
refrigerant containing components from the indoor air. Use of a
secondary loop will decrease efficiency, increasing energy
consumption. The additional system cost is better spent increasing
the inherently safer fluorocarbon system efficiency, further reducing
environmental impact.
A 1997 report (Keller, 1997) showed that fluorocarbon systems provide
the lowest LCCP per unit of investment. A 10 SEER propane system
would cost 30% more than the conventional HCFC-22 system and have an

Residences use air conditioning in warm and humid global locations.
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LCCP of 33,000 Kg CO2. If the additional system costs required for
propane were instead used to purchase a 12 SEER unit with HCFCs or
HFCs, the LCCP would be reduced to between 29,300 and 29,850 Kg CO2
(Dieckmann, 1999).
Industry HFCs -- The Balanced Solution
HFCs offer the best solution for meeting long-term residential air
conditioning requirements. Commercially available throughout the
world, HFCs are energy efficient, low in toxicity, cost-effective, can
be used safely and are reusable. Use in efficient systems reduces
fossil fuel consumption and the corresponding CO2 emissions.
Industry Principles
The industry actively advocates the following principles for all
refrigerants worldwide:
- Contain refrigerants in tight systems and containers, minimizing
atmospheric releases;
- Recover, recycle and reclaim refrigerants;
- Train all personnel in proper refrigerant handling;
- Comply with applicable standards (e.g. ISO 5149, ASHRAE 15),
governing proper installation and maintenance of machinery spaces;
- Size equipment to match the specific need, thereby minimizing the
refrigerant amount; and
- Design, install and operate to optimize energy efficiency.
Balanced Solutions for Society...Residential Air Conditioning.
Energy Efficiency, Reduced CO2 Emissions, Availability, Affordability.
HFCs - the RIGHT Choice for Residential Air Conditioning.
The Alliance for Responsible Atmospheric Policy is a leading industry
voice which coordinates industry participation in the development of
reasonable international and U.S. government policies regarding ozone
protection and global climate change.
References:
Treadwell, D.W., 1994, "Application of Propane (R-290) to a single
packaged unitary air-conditioning product," ARI Flammability Workshop,
Air Conditioning and Refrigeration Institute, Arlington, VA
Keller, Fred J, Liang, Hongmei and Farzad, Mohsen, 1997, "Assessment
of Propane as a Refrigerant in Residential Air-Conditioning and Heap
Pump Applications," ASHRAE/NIST Refrigerants Conference - October 1997
Dieckmann, John, Magid, Hillel, 1999, "Comparison of HFC and
Alternative Technologies for Refrigeration, Air-Conditioning, Foam,
Solvent, Aerosol Propellant, and Fire Protection Applications," A.D.
Little Inc.

The Alliance for Responsible Atmospheric Policy
2111 Wilson Blvd., Suite 850 - Arlington, VA 22201
Phone: (703) 243-0344 - Fax: (703) 243-2874
E-mail: info@arap.org
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