Communications Earth & Environment (Dec 2024)

Emissions of HFC-23 do not reflect commitments made under the Kigali Amendment

  • Ben Adam,
  • Luke M. Western,
  • Jens Mühle,
  • Haklim Choi,
  • Paul B. Krummel,
  • Simon O’Doherty,
  • Dickon Young,
  • Kieran M. Stanley,
  • Paul J. Fraser,
  • Christina M. Harth,
  • Peter K. Salameh,
  • Ray F. Weiss,
  • Ronald G. Prinn,
  • Jooil Kim,
  • Hyeri Park,
  • Sunyoung Park,
  • Matt Rigby

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-024-01946-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract HFC-23 (trifluoromethane) is a potent greenhouse gas released to the atmosphere primarily as a by-product of HCFC-22 (chlorodifluoromethane) synthesis. Since 2020, the Kigali Amendment to the Montreal Protocol has required Parties to destroy their HFC-23 emissions to the extent possible. Here, we present updated HFC-23 emissions estimated from atmospheric observations. Globally, emissions fell to 14.0 ± 0.9 Gg yr-1 in 2023 from their maximum in 2019 of 17.3 ± 0.8 Gg yr-1, but remained five times higher than reported in 2021. Atmospheric observation-based emissions for eastern China, the world’s largest HCFC-22 producer, were also found to be substantially higher than 2020-2022 reported emissions. We estimate that potential HFC-23 sources not directly linked to HCFC-22 production explain only a minor, albeit highly uncertain, fraction of this discrepancy. Our findings suggest that HFC-23 emissions have not been destroyed to the extent reported by the Parties since the implementation of the Kigali Amendment.