Subscribe to the daily news Sign in
En
China issues national plan to reduce HCFC and HFC use by 2030
17 July 2025

China issues national plan to reduce HCFC and HFC use by 2030

China has released its national implementation plan for the Montreal Protocol for 2025–2030, detailing measures to phase down ozone-depleting substances and hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) in line with its commitments under the Protocol and its Kigali Amendment.

The plan mandates a gradual reduction of hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs), targeting a 67.5% cut in production and 73.2% in consumption by 2025 from baseline levels, and a 97.5% cut by 2030. Limited production and use will be retained only for servicing refrigeration and air conditioning systems. Production of HCFC-141b for controlled use will be banned from January 1, 2026.

For HFCs, China aims to reduce production and consumption by 10% of baseline values by 2029. Restrictions include a ban from 2026 on household refrigerator and freezer production using HFCs, and from 2029 on the use of refrigerants with Global Warming Potential (GWP) over 750 in most new room air conditioners and small commercial systems. Automotive air conditioning systems in new M1 vehicles must not use refrigerants with GWP over 150 starting July 1, 2029.

The plan also includes quota licensing and registration systems for production, use, sales, and import/export of controlled substances. It introduces stricter controls on by-products, feedstock uses, and exempted uses such as quarantine and preshipment applications of methyl bromide.

To improve end-of-life management, the plan mandates registration of maintenance and refrigerant recovery units, promotes technician training and certification, and encourages regeneration and traceability of recovered refrigerants. Halon recovery and destruction are also addressed.

Import and export controls will be strengthened with enhanced licensing, inspections, and anti-smuggling enforcement. The plan supports R&D into alternatives and promotes green refrigerants through updates to standards, financial support, and government procurement policies.

“Relevant departments should strengthen supervision, properly manage quotas and registration, and encourage industry associations to promote alternative technologies,” the document states, urging joint efforts to fulfill China’s obligations under the Montreal Protocol and contribute to global climate and ozone protection.
Share
Get the daily refrigeration briefing
Trusted by 3,000+ refrigeration professionals worldwide
By subscribing, you create a free Refindustry account and agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.
No spam. Only industry-relevant news.
Unsubscribe anytime.

Related news

AHRI Says EPA Refrigerant Rule Puts U.S. Investment at Risk
The Air-Conditioning, Heating, and Refrigeration Institute (AHRI) and the Alliance for Responsible Atmospheric Policy criticized an EPA final rule that delays refrigerant transition dates for ne...
22 May 2026
NASRC Trains 1,079 Technicians in Natural Refrigeration
The North American Sustainable Refrigeration Council (NASRC) concluded the 2025-26 season of its Natural Refrigerant Training Summit series, providing free training for technicians and expanded lea...
yesterday
EIA ranks U.S. supermarkets on HFC refrigerant reduction
The Environmental Investigation Agency has released its 2026 Climate-Friendly Supermarkets Scorecard, assessing major U.S. food retailers on efforts to reduce hydrofluorocarbons used as refrigerant...
yesterday
Hudson signs Solstice licensing deal for R-448A, R-449A
Hudson Technologies has signed a licensing agreement with Solstice Advanced Materials for the reclamation and resale of R-448A and R-449A refrigerants in the United States and Canada. According to ...
30 Mar 2026
EU Safety Rules Trump F-Gas Certification for Natural Refrigerant Work
The European Commission has confirmed that occupational safety and health directives fully apply to technicians working with natural refrigerants and are not replaced by F-gas certification und...
14 Apr 2026
DOJ Settlement Requires Kroger to Cut Refrigerant Leaks in U.S.
The U.S. Department of Justice announced a proposed settlement with The Kroger Company to resolve alleged Clean Air Act violations at grocery stores nationwide. Under the proposed consent decree, K...
07 May 2026