
NYC HVAC regulations and compliance guidance for property owners.
Refrigerant management in New York City is governed by a combination of federal EPA regulations, New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) rules, and NYC-specific requirements. Building owners and facility managers responsible for commercial HVAC systems, chillers, and refrigeration equipment must comply with strict rules governing refrigerant purchasing, handling, leak detection, repair timelines, and disposal. The EPA's refrigerant management program under Section 608 of the Clean Air Act sets leak repair thresholds for commercial and industrial equipment — systems containing 50 or more pounds of refrigerant must be repaired within 30 days if leak rates exceed specified thresholds. New York City's local regulations add additional layers of compliance, particularly for cooling towers and large commercial systems. Proper refrigerant management not only keeps you compliant but also reduces operating costs and environmental impact across your building's cooling infrastructure.
Federal penalties for refrigerant management violations can reach $44,539 per day per violation. NYC-specific violations can add additional fines. Intentional venting of refrigerants is a criminal offense under the Clean Air Act. Companies may also face lawsuits from tenants or neighbors exposed to refrigerant releases.
We provide comprehensive refrigerant management services including leak detection, EPA-compliant repairs, proper recovery and recycling, and complete recordkeeping. Our certified technicians track all refrigerant usage across your portfolio so you stay compliant with every applicable regulation.
The EPA requires repair of commercial refrigeration equipment when the annual leak rate reaches 20%, and comfort cooling (HVAC) and industrial process refrigeration equipment when it reaches 30%. For systems containing 50 or more pounds of refrigerant, owners must conduct a leak rate calculation after each service event involving refrigerant addition.
EPA regulations require that records of refrigerant purchases, additions, recoveries, and disposals be maintained for at least 3 years. We recommend keeping records for 5 years as a best practice, as NYC enforcement actions may reference older service history. Our digital tracking system makes this effortless.
When HVAC equipment is decommissioned, all refrigerant must be recovered to the required evacuation levels by a certified technician before the equipment is disposed of. Recovered refrigerant can be recycled for reuse in the same system, reclaimed by an EPA-certified reclaimer, or destroyed. Venting is illegal.
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