Subscribe to the daily news Sign in
En
HVAC Is Not The Problem – It’s Part Of The Solution
03 April 2020

HVAC Is Not The Problem – It’s Part Of The Solution

Heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) systems must be allowed to play their important role in helping essential services deal with the Covid-19 pandemic, according to the UK’s F Gas register REFCOM.

It refuted rumours that air conditioning and ventilation could help to spread the virus adding that these were completely unfounded and not backed up by any scientific evidence.

Speaking on a webinar hosted by the Building Engineering Services Association (BESA), Head of REFCOM Graeme Fox, said cooling and ventilation systems were not the problem, but rather they were part of the solution.

For example, by switching air handling units to full fresh air mode and temporarily disabling recirculation with heat recovery, facilities managers could ensure contaminated air was not recirculated in occupied spaces.

“Health is more important than energy efficiency right now,” said Mr Fox. “It is also important to keep up air change rates – even in partially occupied buildings – to minimise the risk of moisture, which could contain the virus, settling on internal surfaces.”

Public Health England stated that transmission of the virus is thought to occur mainly through respiratory droplets generated by coughing and sneezing, and through contact with contaminated surfaces. It has not recommended any special cleaning measures for ventilation and cooling systems.

Mr Fox said scaremongering was unhelpful to those trying to understand the threat.

Crucial
“The truth is that HVAC systems perform a crucial role in keeping essential services like hospitals, supermarkets, care homes and schools operating – this is going to be more important than ever over the coming weeks and months,” he said.

The Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS) is also urging the industry to keep up its vital work for the NHS, food suppliers and other essential services. During another BESA webinar last week, an official from BEIS confirmed that building maintenance should continue as normal, subject to compliance with Public Health England guidance, the government’s social distancing policy and the site operating guidance published by the Construction Leadership Council.

“Building maintenance is helping to save lives,” he said. “People who fix crucial safety issues in buildings…must be able to keep working. They are carrying out important work”.

REFCOM’s position is also supported by guidance from REHVA, the European Federation of HVAC associations, which said humidification, air conditioning and duct cleaning had no practical effect on the transmission of the coronavirus.

It said Covid-19, unlike some other viruses, is largely resistant to environmental changes and is susceptible only to high relative humidities above 80% and temperatures above 30degC. It is recommending that heating and cooling systems are operated normally to ensure buildings can continue to support critical activities and maintain the health and wellbeing of occupants.

www.refcom.org.uk

Related tags: HVAC, air conditioning, REHVA
Share

Related news

Eurovent and REHVA renew cooperation to support sustainable buildin...
Eurovent and REHVA have renewed their Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), reinforcing their collaboration to promote healthier and more sustainable buildings across Europe. The agreement contin...
21 Nov 2025
Carrier Japan joins Tsuyama Open Factory 2025 to engage local students
Carrier Japan welcomed 19 elementary school students and their families to its Tsuyama factory in Okayama Prefecture on July 25 as part of the Tsuyama Area Open Factory 2025 initiative. Organized b...
28 Aug 2025
US urged to align safety standards to allow propane in AC and heat ...
A new report from the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) US highlights a pathway for opening the US residential and commercial HVAC market to hydrocarbon refrigerants such as propane (R-290),...
01 Oct 2025
Beijer Ref UK to open third training academy in Scotland
Beijer Ref UK will open a new training academy in Glasgow on 6 November, expanding its network to three sites across the country. The launch supports the group’s strategy to provide accessible,...
30 Oct 2025
LG Brazil promotes integrated HVAC retrofit solutions for commercia...
LG Electronics do Brasil is positioning itself as a strategic partner for the modernization of commercial buildings through its advanced HVAC portfolio aimed at retrofit projects. The company’s app...
20 Nov 2025
EU reports 37% drop in HFCs placed on market in 2024 under revised ...
The European Environment Agency (EEA) has published its 2025 report on fluorinated greenhouse gases (F-gases), summarising company-reported data from 2007 to 2024 on production, import, export, rec...
17 Nov 2025