ACHR News
search
Ask ACHR NEWS AI
cart
facebook twitter instagram linkedin youtube
  • Sign In
  • Subscribe
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
ACHR News
  • NEWS
    • Breaking News
    • New HVAC Products
    • Featured Products
    • Manufacturer Reports
    • HVAC Data
    • Legislation
    • ACHR NEWS Centennial
  • RESIDENTIAL
    • Air Conditioners
    • Furnaces
    • Residential Heat Pumps
    • Ductless
    • Residential IAQ
    • Testing, Monitoring, Tools
    • Components & Accessories
  • COMMERCIAL
    • Air Handlers
    • Rooftop Units
    • Chillers and Cooling Towers
    • Commercial Heat Pumps
    • Boilers and Hydronics
    • VRF/Ductless
    • Commercial IAQ
  • REFRIGERATION
    • Refrigerants
    • Refrigerant Regulations
    • Leak Management
  • CONTRACTOR PRO
    • Geothermal
    • Homeowner Study
    • VRF and VRV Ductless
    • Unitary Trends
  • EDUCATION
    • Training and Education
    • Business Management
    • Service and Maintenance
    • Continuing Education
    • Market Research >
      • HVAC Brand Awareness Report
      • VRV, VRF, VRVZ Report
      • Unitary Trends Report
      • Water Heat Professionals Report
    • Webinars
    • Sponsor Insights
    • eProducts Info
    • White Papers
  • EVENTS
    • HVAC Contractor Forum
    • Industry Events and Webinars
  • MEDIA
    • Videos
    • AHR Expo 2025 Videos
    • Podcasts >
      • ACHR News Podcast
      • HARDI Podcasts
      • AHR Expo Podcasts
      • ACCA Podcasts
    • Interactive Spotlights
    • Quizzes
    • eBooks
    • HVAC Talkback
  • HVAC GROUP
    • ACHR NEWS >
      • Current Issue
      • Digital Edition
      • Subscribe
    • Distribution Trends
    • SNIPS NEWS >
      • Join SNIPS NEWS
    • Engineered Systems News >
      • Join ES News
    • HVACR Directory
    • Contests
    • Newsletters
    • Contact
    • Advertise
    • My Account

Canadian Reclaim Sets Standard

By Peter Powell
April 7, 2008

Contractors in the United States have a few complaints about submitting refrigerant for reclamation. Among them are the costs to do such a noble thing, the complexity of reclamation options, and the sheer numbers of reclamation services promoting their procedures and incentives as the best.

Those contractors’ counterparts in Canada point to a system in that country that seems to be a lot less costly and confusing. Canadian contractors simply take recovered refrigerant back to their local supply houses, drop it off - and forget about it.

An industry-created and -regulated program called Refrigerant Management Canada (RMC) makes sure the returned refrigerant is either brought back to ARI-700 purity standards for reintroduction to the market, or sent for destruction in an environmentally acceptable way. The cost of the program is generated by a levy attached to each kilogram of refrigerant produced for the Canadian market. The refrigerant manufacturers pay that levy to RMC on the front end. The money stays in the industry to run the program. It does not go to government agencies.

GOOD PARTNERSHIP

“It has been good for everyone - manufacturers, wholesalers, contractors, and end users,” said Brian Baker, a contractor from Winnipeg, Manitoba.

The RMC describes it as “a partnership between manufacturers, importers, reclaimers, contractors, and wholesalers in the Canadian refrigeration and air conditioning industry that is strongly supported by Environmental Canada [the Canadian counterpart of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency], the provincial environment ministries, and Friends of the Earth Canada.” RMC is administered by the Heating, Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Institute of Canada (HRAI), which represents manufacturers, wholesalers, and contractors.

The current levy is $1.50/kg of refrigerant. In U.S. terminology, Baker said the levy would add about $20 to a 30-pound cylinder of R-22 that costs about $120 these days - assuming the levy that is paid to RMC by manufacturers is passed through the supply chain to contractors. The levy applies to CFCs and HCFCs, with R-22 being the primary refrigerant affected.

RMC’s elected chairman, Dennis Larson of Refrigerative Supply Ltd., Burnaby, British Columbia, said that even though refrigerant manufacturers participate voluntarily in the program, they are motivated to do it both as a demonstration of environmental responsibility and because the program allows for a third-party reclamation/destruction option.

Larson said virtually all refrigerant manufacturers supplying products to Canada, including all major manufacturers, are on board with the program.

Baker said that since end users own their refrigerant at jobsites, contractors typically explain the reclamation option to the owners when a piece of equipment needs to be replaced, or when there is a question about refrigerant purity. He said contractors can charge for the recovery services similar to normal service work provided.

The contractor then brings the recovered refrigerant to a wholesaler and, according to RMC, “provides information to the wholesaler concerning the content of the container, where the refrigerant originated, and other information pertinent to the program.” Wholesalers then store the refrigerant until “an appropriate volume of containers is reached.” Then, “the wholesaler will contact an RMC collection service provider who will arrange for containers to be shipped to their locations.”

Currently RMC has three collection service providers: Fielding Chemical Technologies in Mississauga, Ontario; Protocol Resource Management, Aurora, Ontario; and Refrigerant Services Inc., Dartmouth, Nova Scotia. At the reclamation sites, testing is done to determine the purity of the refrigerant and whether or not it can be brought back to ARI-700 purity standards, the same standard used in the United States.

Baker said contractors commit to the RMC because “we are just happy to get it” - refrigerant of questionable purity, that is - “the hell off our hands.” He said that, in general, contractors in Canada are not concerned about refrigerant banking and credit programs like those offered in the United States, which were designed to entice more stateside contractors to use reclamation services. He said Canadian contractors typically return to their wholesalers to purchase additional refrigerants at prevailing prices regardless of whether it is reclaimed or virgin, knowing both are at ARI-700 purity standards.

Publication date: 04/07/2008

Share This Story

Looking for a reprint of this article?
From high-res PDFs to custom plaques, order your copy today!

 

Peter Powell is Refrigeration Editor. He can be contacted at 815-654-7270 or peterpowell@achrnews.com. Peter was formerly Editor/Publisher of Service & Contracting, where he gained his refrigeration experience. Among his duties, Powell is responsible for the monthly Refrigeration Zone sections in The NEWS

Recommended Content

JOIN TODAY
To unlock your recommendations.

Already have an account? Sign In

  • HVAC-enrollment

    The Trades Are Back: HVACR Programs See Nearly 30% Enrollment Spike

    A new wave of future technicians is entering the pipeline.  
    Training and Education
    By: Matt Jachman
  • 2025 Top 40 Under 40

    2025 Top 40 Under 40 HVACR Professionals List

    The 11th annual Top 40 Under 40 list highlights those...
    HVAC Commercial Market
    By: Hannah Belloli-Oster
  • LG Ductless Mini-Split Systems

    The 9 Types of Heat Pumps

    As the U.S. moves toward electrification, heat pumps are...
    Air Source Heat Pumps
    By: Joanna R. Turpin
Subscription Center
  • Create an Account
  • Start a Subscription
  • Manage My Account
  • Sign Up for Newsletters
  • Visit Customer Service
  • Update Preferences

More Videos

Sponsored Content

Sponsored Content is a special paid section where industry companies provide high quality, objective, non-commercial content around topics of interest to The News audience. All Sponsored Content is supplied by the advertising company and any opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and not necessarily reflect the views of The News or its parent company, BNP Media. Interested in participating in our Sponsored Content section? Contact your local rep!

close
  • Piggy Bank
    Sponsored byWatercress Financial

    Energy Prices, Inflation, and HVAC: What Today’s Homeowners Care About

  • Refrigerated Food
    Sponsored bySolstice Advanced Materials

    R-455A Refrigeration: A Cold Storage Solution for the Future

  • Airex Rooftop Units
    Sponsored byAirex Manufacturing Inc

    Consolidating Roof Penetrations: A Growing Trend in Multifamily HVAC Design

Popular Stories

HVAC-Price-Increase-graphic

HVAC Price Increase List: June 2026

Trump-Section-232.jpg

Trump Reduces Section 232 Tariffs on HVAC Equipment to 15%

R410A-Refrigerant-Cylinder.jpg

Refrigerant Recovery is a Revenue Opportunity

Heat-pump-cutaway.jpg

PFAS Rules and A2L Building Codes Continue to Evolve

Midea-training.jpg

HVAC Workforce Crisis Expands Beyond Technicians to Instructor Shortages

View The ACHR NEWS
Centennial Anniversary Timeline

The ACHR News Timeline Chart
Submit a Letter
Submit a letter to our editors.

Events

November 6, 2025

Next-Gen Data Center Cooling: HVAC Innovation and Real-World Solutions

On Demand As AI workloads and high-density computing push traditional cooling methods to their limits, the data center industry is accelerating the adoption of next-generation HVAC technologies.

June 17, 2026

Decarbonization Without Disruption

This webinar will explore practical HVAC decarbonization strategies that minimize disruption while maximizing long-term performance and ROI.

View All Submit An Event

Poll

Summer Staff

Are you fully staffed for the summer season?
View Results Poll Archive

Products

BNI Mechanical/Electrical Square Foot Costbook, 2026 Edition

BNI Mechanical/Electrical Square Foot Costbook, 2026 Edition

See More Products
Decarbonization Without Disruption - Free Webinar - 6/17/2026

Related Articles

  • Teacher Sets the Standard

    See More
  • UL Sets the Standard

    See More
  • Chicago TAB Certification

    Chicago’s New TAB Lab Expands Access, Sets Gold Standard for Sheet Metal Workforce

    See More

Related Products

See More Products
  • HVAC Air Duct Leakage Test Manual, 2nd Edition

See More Products
×

Sign Up. Stay Informed.

The #1 trusted source for the HVACR industry since 1926

SUBSCRIBE
  • RESOURCES
    • Advertise
    • Contact Us
    • Advisory Board
    • Classifieds
    • Submit a Letter
    • Directories
    • Store
  • ACCOUNT CENTER
    • Create an Account
    • Start a Subscription
    • Manage My Account
    • Sign Up for Newsletters
    • Visit Customer Service
    • Update Preferences
  • SERVICES
    • Marketing Services
    • Reprints
    • Market Research
    • List Rental
    • Survey/Respondent Access
  • STAY CONNECTED
    • LinkedIn
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • X (Twitter)
  • PRIVACY
    • PRIVACY POLICY
    • TERMS & CONDITIONS
    • DO NOT SELL MY PERSONAL INFORMATION
    • PRIVACY REQUEST
    • ACCESSIBILITY

Copyright ©2026. All Rights Reserved BNP Media, Inc. and BNP Media II, LLC.

Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing