Greener GM to Pioneer A/C With 99.7% Reduction in Greenhouse Gas
Thứ năm, 12/08/2010 - 02:02
A newly developed A/C refrigerant developed by Honeywell for the European market to have 99.7% lower global warming potential (GWP) will be used by GM to cool its entire fleet of 2013 models. The new low emission coolant was developed by Honeywell initially to meet EU standards which have long been much more strict than US NHTSA standards governing greenhouse gas emissions from vehicles.
A newly developed A/C refrigerant developed by Honeywell for
the European market to have 99.7% lower global warming potential (GWP) will be
used by GM to cool its entire fleet of 2013 models.
The new low emission coolant was developed by Honeywell
initially to meet EU standards which have long been much more strict than US
NHTSA standards governing greenhouse gas emissions from vehicles.
Now that the US
is beginning to develop EU level clean vehicle standards, Honeywell’s HFO1234yf
will have a new market in the US
as well, and GM is the first on board to announce incorporating the
environmentally friendlier refrigerant in its line-up here.
Names like Buick, GMC and Cadillac may seem hardly
synonymous with green driving. But the new GM, (which, like Honeywell is a
member of the breakaway Chamber of Commerce for clean energy) has a more
fuel-efficient 2013 Chevy line-up ( including the Volt) which will also use HFO1234yf.
In 2007, as part of Kyoto
rules, new low emissions standards for mobile air conditioning (MAC standards)
were mandated in Europe. With a requirement
that all new vehicles must use refrigerants with a global warming potential
below 150 by 2011 – Honeywell and Dupont developed products to meet the
standard.
The very first standards for carbon emissions ever in the US were just
proposed by the Obama administration EPA last year. These clean fuel standards
require that by model year 2016 the fleet-wide average must have emissions of
no more than 250 grams per mile. Because of the high GWP of current
refrigerants, the EPA will allow auto manufacturers to earn credits toward that
fleet-wide average by improvements to air conditioning systems that reduce
greenhouse gases.
Hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) were substituted for
Ozone-depleting CFCs after the 1987 Montreal Protocol. At that time, following
the warning of scientists who noticed that CFCs were creating a hole in the
Ozone layer, the entire world quickly agreed to phase out
atmosphere-endangering chlorofluorocarbons. However in 2009 the replacement HFCs
were found to be a potent greenhouse gas and the search was on for a
substitute.
GM has jumped ahead of the other automakers who serve the US market by
implementing this A/C refrigerant which solves both problems. It neither slices
open our atmosphere, leaving humans exposed to space, nor turns it into a
gradually warming blanket that will suffocate our civilization.