Canada and Mexico have joined the United States in proposing
to expand the scope of the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the
Ozone Layer to fight climate change. The proposal would phase down
hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs).
The U.S. EPA led the analysis in the proposal. The agency
believes that reducing HFCs would help slow climate change and curb potential
public health impacts.
During the phaseout of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) under the
Montreal Protocol and the Clean Air Act, manufacturers of equipment such as car
air conditioners and kitchen refrigerators substituted HFCs. The trilateral
proposal would phase down HFCs, which are up to 14,000 times more damaging to
the Earth's climate system than CO
2, according to EPA
statistics.
Signed in 1987, the Montreal Protocol is a treaty with 196
countries to help restore the ozone layer by ending the production of
ozone-depleting substances and now potentially phasing down HFCs.
The public is encouraged to provide comments to docket
number EPA-HQ-2009-0286 at
www.regulations.gov.
More information on the trilateral proposal is available at
www.epa.gov/ozone/intpol/mpagreement.html.
More information on the four replacement chemicals is
available at
www.epa.gov/ozone/snap
Source: EPA news release