Shipping Refrigerant Gases Under Compressed Gas Regulations
HVAC refrigerant gases are essential for air conditioning, commercial refrigeration, and heat pump systems worldwide. These products are classified as Class 2 compressed gases under IATA DGR and IMDG Code, with classifications varying by refrigerant type from non-flammable (Class 2.2) to flammable (Class 2.1) depending on their chemical properties.
Common Refrigerant Classifications
R-134a (UN3159, Class 2.2) is a non-flammable, non-toxic refrigerant. R-410A (UN3163, Class 2.2) is similarly classified as a non-flammable gas mixture. R-32 (UN3252, Class 2.1) is a mildly flammable A2L refrigerant gaining market share. R-290 (propane, UN1978, Class 2.1) is a highly flammable natural refrigerant. The industry transition toward lower-GWP refrigerants is shifting shipping from predominantly Class 2.2 toward more Class 2.1 products.
IATA DGR Air Transport
Air shipping of refrigerant gases under IATA DGR follows Packing Instruction 200 for cylinders and small containers. Non-flammable refrigerants (Class 2.2) have more generous quantity allowances than flammable alternatives (Class 2.1). Air freight of refrigerant gases serves emergency HVAC repair situations and international market supply where ocean transit times are impractical.
IMDG Code Ocean Transport
Bulk refrigerant shipping under the IMDG Code in cylinders, ton containers, and ISO tanks serves the global HVAC supply chain. Stowage requirements differ between flammable and non-flammable classifications. Container loading of mixed refrigerant types requires verification that all products in the container are compatible for co-loading under IMDG segregation rules.
HVAC Distribution Logistics
LTL distribution of refrigerant cylinders to HVAC contractors, wholesalers, and service companies follows DOT hazmat requirements. Warehouse distribution centers maintain multiple refrigerant types in cylinder yards with proper segregation between flammable and non-flammable products. Seasonal demand peaks during summer cooling months require advance inventory positioning.
Refrigerant Transition Challenges
The HFC phase-down under the Kigali Amendment is driving rapid changes in refrigerant types and shipping volumes. New A2L flammable refrigerants replacing non-flammable HFCs change transport classification from Class 2.2 to Class 2.1, affecting carrier requirements, insurance, and logistics costs. Natural refrigerants like propane (R-290) carry full Class 2.1 flammable gas requirements.
Go Freight’s Refrigerant Logistics
Go Freight provides refrigerant gas shipping from South Florida’s HVAC market. Our compressed gas team handles both legacy and next-generation refrigerants with appropriate classification and compliance for each product.
Refrigerant Gas Shipping
Ship HVAC refrigerants compliantly with Go Freight’s compressed gas logistics expertise.
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