If you are looking for EIA UK, it's overhere.

Phase down of HFCs Under Montreal Protocol Receives Huge Boost From North American Leaders

WASHINGTON, D.C. - The United States joined with Canada and Mexico today in formally supporting a proposal to curtail production and use of hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs). In materials released by the U.S. State Department, the three nations detailed a schedule that if adopted will authorize the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer to limit and ratchet down international production and use of HFCs.

"This is precisely the type of innovative and enlightened approach needed to meet the challenge of global warming," according to Samuel LaBudde, U.S. Director of Climate Policy for the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) -- which first proposed and has been working to move HFCs under the Montreal Protocol for two years. "A rapid phase-out of HFCs is easily the most significant, achievable and cost-effective strategy for near-term mitigation of climate change," added LaBudde.

The North American action follows a joint proposal submitted earlier this year by Micronesia and Mauritius that similarly called for expanding the Montreal Protocol's scope to include chemicals that do not impact the ozone layer but do contribute to global warming. Because HFCs are used as replacements for ozone depleting substances and have global warming potentials up to hundreds or thousands of times greater than CO2, their soaring growth for use in refrigerators and air conditioners threatens to negate the benefits that might be obtained from reducing other greenhouse gas emissions.

"An HFC phase out is absolutely essential to the success of global climate protection, particularly in light of the refusal of some nations to commit to emissions reductions at Copenhagen," said LaBudde. "The need for action on HFCs is clear, the alternatives are available, and now it appears the political will exists for solving a critical aspect of global warming within a forum that has never failed and already includes every nation on Earth."

Although most nations have not yet taken official positions, support for regulating HFCs under the Montreal Protocol is widespread and growing. With 195 member nations including China and India, and widely regarded as the most successful environmental accord in history, the Montreal Protocol's full Conference of the Parties takes place in Egypt this November.

CONTACT:
Samuel LaBudde, EIA (202) 483-6621 -- samlabudde@eia-international.org
For more information on HFCs & the Montreal Protocol visit: eia-global.org

SOURCE Environmental Investigation Agency

Samuel LaBudde, EIA, +1-202-483-6621, samlabudde@eia-international.org

View all Press Releases
What are the HFC-free Technologies?
Widespread adoption of HFC-free technologies is cost-effective, energy efficient, and climate-friendly. Read EIA’s report Putting the Freeze on HFCs for hundreds of examples of HFC-free technologies available and in use today.
A Global HFC Phase-down
The October 2016 Montreal Protocol meeting in Kigali, Rwanda yielded a global agreement to phase down HFCs. Now countries must ratify and implement the Kigali Amendment! Read and share EIA's briefing on this great opportunity and obligation to avert climate catastrophe.
Help us mitigate climate destroying gases
Where are HFCs used?
What are HFCs?
How to Recycle Your Fridge