Zürcher Nachrichten - In Indonesia, a start-up captures coolants to stop global warming

EUR -
AED 4.317442
AFN 82.280732
ALL 97.973412
AMD 451.334081
ANG 2.103685
AOA 1077.878551
ARS 1475.878439
AUD 1.792929
AWG 2.118731
AZN 1.979957
BAM 1.964626
BBD 2.373362
BDT 143.108616
BGN 1.956761
BHD 0.443149
BIF 3452.268306
BMD 1.17544
BND 1.506869
BOB 8.122488
BRL 6.540263
BSD 1.175481
BTN 101.506993
BWP 16.385608
BYN 3.846881
BYR 23038.630847
BZD 2.361207
CAD 1.599418
CDF 3392.321088
CHF 0.931418
CLF 0.029122
CLP 1117.526924
CNY 8.433546
CNH 8.430552
COP 4786.675208
CRC 592.863279
CUC 1.17544
CUP 31.149169
CVE 110.785192
CZK 24.616539
DJF 208.899272
DKK 7.464388
DOP 70.998441
DZD 152.515562
EGP 57.676534
ERN 17.631605
ETB 160.680906
FJD 2.63792
FKP 0.870925
GBP 0.868627
GEL 3.185027
GGP 0.870925
GHS 12.253977
GIP 0.870925
GMD 84.631694
GNF 10174.611298
GTQ 9.021527
GYD 245.924751
HKD 9.226684
HNL 30.972849
HRK 7.535869
HTG 154.25294
HUF 399.002636
IDR 19110.544288
ILS 3.92509
IMP 0.870925
INR 101.489694
IQD 1539.826858
IRR 49500.730439
ISK 142.404282
JEP 0.870925
JMD 188.496771
JOD 0.833415
JPY 172.384229
KES 152.215408
KGS 102.79252
KHR 4722.919448
KMF 496.035863
KPW 1057.932758
KRW 1622.894714
KWD 0.358656
KYD 0.979601
KZT 627.187471
LAK 25348.371527
LBP 105260.683334
LKR 354.575293
LRD 236.263473
LSL 20.711055
LTL 3.47077
LVL 0.711012
LYD 6.37674
MAD 10.613061
MDL 19.935555
MGA 5207.200983
MKD 61.83594
MMK 2467.194078
MNT 4218.982661
MOP 9.504597
MRU 46.805846
MUR 53.603261
MVR 18.104167
MWK 2041.085362
MXN 21.924725
MYR 4.973877
MZN 75.181368
NAD 20.710743
NGN 1799.351869
NIO 43.197145
NOK 11.843796
NPR 162.41159
NZD 1.960064
OMR 0.451962
PAB 1.175481
PEN 4.184212
PGK 4.876608
PHP 66.901956
PKR 334.912319
PLN 4.253742
PYG 8938.889389
QAR 4.279306
RON 5.069083
RSD 117.131444
RUB 92.273012
RWF 1690.870943
SAR 4.409502
SBD 9.738635
SCR 16.614687
SDG 705.849512
SEK 11.184961
SGD 1.503031
SHP 0.923712
SLE 27.035133
SLL 24648.401045
SOS 671.761896
SRD 43.060497
STD 24329.242027
STN 24.919335
SVC 10.284896
SYP 15282.9083
SZL 20.711318
THB 37.825618
TJS 11.284493
TMT 4.125796
TND 3.382327
TOP 2.753001
TRY 47.521584
TTD 7.982861
TWD 34.551951
TZS 3067.899307
UAH 49.103221
UGX 4217.947996
USD 1.17544
UYU 47.463216
UZS 14957.478387
VES 140.423509
VND 30731.887934
VUV 139.605577
WST 3.098618
XAF 658.917007
XAG 0.029912
XAU 0.000343
XCD 3.176687
XCG 2.118517
XDR 0.820291
XOF 660.597177
XPF 119.331742
YER 283.222382
ZAR 20.638675
ZMK 10580.382421
ZMW 27.183113
ZWL 378.491313
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Advertisement Image
In Indonesia, a start-up captures coolants to stop global warming
In Indonesia, a start-up captures coolants to stop global warming / Photo: Jack Moore - AFP

In Indonesia, a start-up captures coolants to stop global warming

In the basement of a Jakarta housing complex, surrounded by the silver piping of the air-conditioning system, Indonesian technician Ari Sobaruddin is doing his part to tackle climate change.

Advertisement Image

Text size:

Ari and his colleagues will spend 12 hours capturing AC refrigerant to stop this "super-pollutant" -- thousands of times more potent than carbon dioxide -- from leaking into the atmosphere.

It is plodding, sweaty work, but Ari, a member of climate startup Recoolit, does not mind.

"I love it because it's about preserving nature, saving nature," the 30-year-old technician told AFP.

Recoolit began working in Indonesia in 2021 to tackle what it considers an often-overlooked contributor to climate change: refrigerants.

These gases found in air-conditioners, fridges and cars are an old environmental problem.

In the 1970s, research showed refrigerants called chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) were destroying the ozone layer.

Countries agreed to phase them out under a deal that came into force in 1989.

While their replacements, particularly hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), are less harmful to the ozone layer, they still have major climate-warming properties.

"And those are in AC units, in the form of refrigerant banks... everywhere in developing countries right now," said Recoolit's head of operations Yosaka Eka Putranta.

- 'Growing problem' -

There are international agreements to phase out HFCs too, but, particularly in developing countries, they will be in use for decades yet.

Demand is increasing as climate change fuels record temperatures and expanding middle classes seek cooling and refrigeration.

"It is a growing problem because we need our indoor environments to be more resilient to climate change," said Robyn Schofield, associate professor of atmospheric chemistry at the University of Melbourne.

HFCs are expected to account for between 7 and 19 percent of greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, according to the United Nations.

The risk comes during maintenance or disposal, when refrigerants like the HFC Ari is capturing can be released accidentally or on purpose.

In Indonesia, as in most countries, this venting is illegal, but enforcement is limited.

"It's odourless, we cannot trace it. (Capturing) it takes so much resources. The machine, the people," said Recoolit's senior business development manager Erik Cahyanta.

"So some people just release it."

Recoolit trains, equips and incentivises technicians to capture refrigerant so it can be destroyed.

Technicians get 50,000 rupiah ($3) per kilogram of recovered refrigerant, which Recoolit sends to a government-approved cement kiln or municipal incinerator to be destroyed.

While refrigerant can be recycled or reused, Recoolit argues this is imperfect.

"Who's going to guarantee that when the refrigerants are injected again... they are going to stay there without another venting?" said Yosaka.

- Big tech interest -

Recoolit sells carbon credits based on the amount of refrigerant it destroys, priced at $75 a unit.

Carbon credits have faced criticism in recent years, and Benja Faecks of Carbon Market Watch warned that "offsetting" can give the impression "that emissions can simply be erased through financial transactions".

This allows "polluters to claim 'carbon neutrality' or 'negating ongoing emissions' without actually reducing their own emissions," she told AFP.

Recoolit argues its carbon credits are robust because it measurably destroys a climate-warming gas.

While many carbon credits are sold on exchanges with third-party verification, Recoolit sells directly to buyers and uses a credit methodology developed by the Carbon Containment Lab, a nonprofit spun out from Yale University.

Yosaka said canisters are sampled, and analysis is then done by the region's only qualified lab, in Malaysia, to confirm the contents are refrigerants.

Destruction facilities pass a "trial burn test" confirming they can break down refrigerants.

Recoolit also pays less than the market price for coolants to avoid creating a market for new refrigerants.

Refrigerant destruction remains a relatively small part of the carbon market. Existing players include US-based Tradewater, which grew out of California's state-level emissions caps and has worked in Latin America and Africa.

But Recoolit has attracted attention from one of the market's biggest corporate players: Google.

Earlier this year, the tech giant announced a partnership with Recoolit and a second company to prevent emissions equivalent to one million tons of carbon dioxide.

Google says it wants to help Recoolit scale up operations and expand outside Indonesia.

Some critics say refrigerant capture should simply be enforced by government policy, but Recoolit argues it is filling a real-world gap unlikely to be addressed otherwise.

And Schofield said the need for refrigerant capture is significant.

"As a climate action... it's a very good one," she said.

"I wish we had more of it."

E.Schneyder--NZN

Advertisement Image