Regulations, Enforcement, and Safety
Beyond the science, Section 608 sets legal duties and safety practices that every technician must follow. This chapter covers the structure of 40 CFR Part 82, the penalties for violations, leak-repair requirements for larger appliances, and the personal protective steps that keep you safe around pressurized refrigerant.
40 CFR Part 82 and Technician Certification
The regulations that carry out Section 608 live in 40 CFR Part 82, Subpart F. They require that anyone who maintains, services, repairs, or disposes of appliances that contain regulated refrigerant be certified as a technician in the proper type. Certification is earned by passing an EPA-approved exam and, once earned, does not expire. Technicians must also certify to EPA that they have acquired and will properly use certified recovery equipment. Only certified technicians and refrigerant wholesalers may buy regulated refrigerant, a sales restriction meant to keep refrigerant out of untrained hands. Apprentices may handle refrigerant only under the direct supervision of a certified technician. Keeping your certification card available and buying only what you are certified to handle are basic compliance habits.
Penalties and Enforcement
EPA enforces Section 608 with substantial civil penalties, currently up to about $37,500 per day per violation, and knowing violations can bring criminal charges. Each day a violation continues can count as a separate offense, so a single ongoing problem can multiply quickly. EPA may also revoke a technician's certification. To encourage reporting, EPA offers a reward of up to $10,000 for information leading to a penalty against someone who violates the venting prohibition. Common violations include venting refrigerant, failing to recover before disposal, tampering with or falsely certifying recovery equipment, and selling refrigerant to uncertified buyers. Because inspectors can ask to see certification and records, keeping honest, complete paperwork is your best protection.
Leak Repair Requirements
Owners and operators of appliances that contain 50 or more pounds of refrigerant must repair leaks when the appliance leaks above a threshold annual rate. The trigger rates are 30 percent per year for industrial process and commercial refrigeration and 10 percent per year for comfort-cooling and all other appliances. When an appliance exceeds its threshold, the leaks must generally be repaired within 30 days, and follow-up verification tests confirm the repair worked. Owners must keep records of refrigerant added during servicing, because a pattern of frequent charging is a sign of a chronic leak. Chronically leaking systems may have to be retrofitted or retired under a plan filed with EPA. Understanding these rates matters even for service technicians, because you are often the person who documents the leak.
Refrigerant Safety and PPE
Refrigerant is stored under pressure and can be dangerous even though most types are nontoxic and nonflammable in normal use. Liquid refrigerant contacting skin or eyes can cause severe frostbite, so always wear safety glasses and gloves when connecting hoses or transferring liquid. In a poorly ventilated space, escaping refrigerant displaces oxygen and can cause suffocation, and it is heavier than air so it settles low, near the floor. Refrigerant exposed to an open flame or a very hot surface can break down into toxic gases, including phosgene and hydrogen chloride, which is one reason a halide or electronic leak detector is safer than an old flame test. Never use oxygen or compressed air to pressurize a system for leak testing, because mixing oxygen with refrigerant oil can cause an explosion; use dry nitrogen instead.
Handling and Storing Cylinders
Refrigerant cylinders demand respect because they combine high pressure with a liquefied gas. Store cylinders upright in a cool, dry, well-ventilated area away from heat sources, open flames, and direct sunlight, and secure them so they cannot tip or fall. Heat raises the pressure inside a cylinder, so never heat a cylinder with a torch and never let it exceed 125°F. Keep the valve cap and protective collar on during transport. Before filling any recovery cylinder, check that it is within its five-year hydrostatic test date and never fill it beyond 80 percent of capacity by weight, leaving room for the liquid to expand as temperature rises. Always weigh a recovery cylinder rather than guessing, and never use a disposable one-trip cylinder to store recovered refrigerant.
Last updated: July 2026