Thanks to the increasing availability of F-gas free alternatives, along with the urgency of reducing greenhouse gases, regulation of F-gases has accelerated in the past few years.
The most important international regulation dates back to 2016 when the Kigali Amendment to the Montreal Protocol was signed.
The agreement added hydrofluorocarbons (HCFs), of which F-gases are a type, to a list of chemicals that countries need to reduce and phase out. For most industrialized countries, the agreement commits them to reduce HCFs by 45 percent by 2024, and by 85 percent by 2036 compared to 2011-2013 levels. The European Union and 132 more states have ratified the amendment.
The US has not yet ratified the Kigali Amendment, but has promised to do so. In the absence of that signature, individual states have adopted their own regulations to reduce F-gases, and other types of HCFs.
California has been leading the charge. In 2006, the state committed itself to reduce the emissions from a range of greenhouse gases, including HCFs, back to 1990 levels by 2020. The targets were reached in 2016. In March 2022, California State Senator Nancy Skinner submitted a bill that would task the state’s Air Resources Board with developing a proposal to transition away from HCFs to natural refrigerants by 2035.
The state recognized early that regulation needed to not just address avoiding leaks, but go further and reduce the use of SF6 in electrical grids. "The emissions of SF6 into the atmosphere have not gone down in California even though we have tightened up on our leak rates," Tom Rak, the former manager of substation and T-Line standards engineering at California utility PG&E said. "It simply has to do with the fact there is just so much new SF6 going on to the grid that the volume of emissions has not gone down."