ANP Marine & Industrial delivers certified F-Gas marine HVAC and refrigeration services to commercial shipping, FPSOs and offshore platforms worldwide. From R407F and R448A retrofit programmes for vessels to offshore HVAC compliance inspections — our engineers carry UK F-Gas certification and produce the full documentation required by flag state, class and charterer.
Our engineers deliver marine HVAC maintenance, system overhaul and offshore HVAC compliance inspections under UK and EU F-Gas regulations. Every job produces compliant leak check records, refrigerant logs and service certificates required by class and flag state.
The UK F-Gas Regulation 2024 and EU Regulation 2024/573 are progressively restricting high-GWP refrigerants. Vessels and offshore facilities using R404A, R407C and R22 must plan conversion to compliant alternatives. ANP Marine manages the full conversion process — from refrigerant selection and class notification to oil flush, system recharge and updated F-Gas records.
| Refrigerant | GWP | Status under UK/EU F-Gas | Recommended alternative | ANP retrofit service |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| R22 (HCFC-22) | 1,810 | Banned — phase-out complete | R407F, R448A, R449A | Full conversion service |
| R404A | 3,922 | Restricted — phase-down ongoing | R448A, R449A, R452A | Full conversion service |
| R407C | 1,774 | Under review — phase-down likely | R407F, R32, R454C | Retrofit planning available |
| R410A | 2,088 | Phase-down from 2025 (EU) | R32, R454B, R466A | Assessment & retrofit |
| R407F | 1,825 | Currently permitted — monitor GWP rules | Transition option from R22/R407C | R407F retrofit for ships |
| R448A | 1,387 | Preferred — low GWP HFO blend | Long-term compliant option | R448A vessel retrofit |
| R449A | 1,397 | Preferred — low GWP HFO blend | Long-term compliant option | Full conversion service |
| R134a | 1,430 | Restricted in new equipment from 2022 | R513A, R1234yf | Assessment available |
Under the UK F-Gas Regulation 2024 (retained from EU 517/2014 with updates) and EU Regulation 2024/573, operators of vessels and offshore platforms with fluorinated gas-containing refrigeration and HVAC systems have specific legal obligations. ANP Marine helps you meet every one of them.
Vessels and offshore facilities must carry out leak checks at legally specified intervals based on the CO₂-equivalent charge of each system. Checks must be carried out by an F-Gas certified engineer using calibrated detection equipment, and written records must be retained.
ANP Marine performs statutory leak checks at all required frequencies, produces compliant written records and flags any systems approaching reporting or repair thresholds.
Operators of systems containing 5 tonnes CO₂-equivalent or more of fluorinated greenhouse gases must maintain an equipment register and a detailed log for each system. Records must include quantities charged and recovered, servicing history, leak check dates and results.
We set up compliant logbooks and equipment registers for vessels and offshore facilities, and update them every time we work on your systems.
Where a leak is detected, operators are legally required to have it repaired without undue delay. Within 30 days of repair, a re-check leak test must be performed to confirm the repair is effective. Failure to repair or re-check constitutes a regulatory breach.
ANP Marine's 24/7 emergency response ensures leaks can be addressed immediately. We carry out repair and mandatory re-check as a single mobilisation where vessel schedule permits.
Both UK and EU F-Gas regulations set binding phase-down schedules for high-GWP refrigerants. Operators must plan ahead for the conversion of R404A, R410A and R407C systems — availability of these gases will decrease and prices will rise significantly as quotas tighten through 2024–2030.
We provide a forward-looking refrigerant risk assessment for your fleet, identifying which systems require conversion and recommending the optimal replacement refrigerant for each application.
Fluorinated refrigerants must only be recovered by certified engineers using certified recovery equipment. Release to atmosphere is prohibited. Recovered refrigerant must be sent for reclamation, recycling or destruction by an approved facility.
All ANP Marine engineers hold individual F-Gas handling certification. We carry certified recovery units to every job and manage the compliant disposal chain for recovered refrigerant.
Classification societies and flag states increasingly require evidence of F-Gas compliance during annual and special surveys. TMSA and oil-major vetting programmes also scrutinise refrigerant records, leak check histories and conversion documentation.
Every ANP Marine service produces a full documentation package formatted for class surveyor and flag state inspector review — covering refrigerant records, test certificates, conversion approval and compliance statements.
Under UK F-Gas Regulation 2024, leak check frequency is determined by the CO₂-equivalent charge of the system. The thresholds below apply to fluorinated gas systems on vessels and offshore facilities operated in or from the UK.
Note: GWP values used to calculate CO₂-equivalent charges are specified in Annex I of the UK F-Gas Regulation 2024. For R404A (GWP 3,922), a system containing 13 kg triggers the 50-tonne threshold. For R448A (GWP 1,387), the same threshold requires approximately 36 kg. Conversion to lower-GWP alternatives can reduce leak check frequency requirements. ANP Marine can calculate CO₂-equivalent charges for your fleet and plan service intervals accordingly.
Comprehensive marine refrigeration engineering for commercial vessels and offshore assets. All refrigerant work is performed under UK F-Gas certification with full documentation for class and flag state.
Questions from ship superintendents, fleet managers and offshore operators about F-Gas regulations as they apply to vessels and offshore facilities. If your question is not here, ask ICE directly or contact our engineering team.
Yes. Both the UK F-Gas Regulation 2024 and EU Regulation 2024/573 apply to fluorinated greenhouse gas-containing equipment on vessels and offshore platforms that are operated by UK or EU-based entities, or that call at UK or EU ports. The regulations cover refrigeration and HVAC systems containing HFCs, PFCs and SF₆.
The relevant obligations include leak checking at statutory intervals, refrigerant record-keeping, use of certified engineers for all F-Gas work, certified recovery of refrigerant before decommissioning, and prohibition on venting or topping up a leaking system without first repairing the leak.
UK F-Gas Reg. 2024 — Scope, Article 2Leak check frequency under the UK F-Gas Regulation is determined by the CO₂-equivalent charge of the system:
Converting to a lower-GWP refrigerant such as R448A or R449A can reduce a system's CO₂-equivalent charge significantly and extend the period between mandatory leak checks — reducing compliance costs. ANP Marine can calculate your CO₂-equivalent charges and plan service intervals for your fleet.
UK F-Gas Reg. 2024 — Article 4For each system containing 5 tonnes CO₂-eq or more, operators must maintain a written equipment record (logbook) containing:
Records must be retained for at least 5 years and made available to the competent authority on request. ANP Marine provides a compliant equipment logbook with every service and updates it each time we work on your systems.
UK F-Gas Reg. 2024 — Article 6No. R22 (HCFC-22) is an ozone-depleting substance controlled under the Montreal Protocol and has been banned from use in new and existing equipment in the UK and EU since 2015. Virgin R22 has not been legally available for servicing since 2010 in the EU. Reclaimed R22 was permitted until 2015 but is no longer available for topping up systems.
Any vessel still operating R22 systems is in breach of both ozone and F-Gas regulations and faces enforcement risk at PSC inspections. Conversion is mandatory. ANP Marine specialises in R407F retrofit for ships and R448A/R449A conversion as the preferred replacements for R22 marine refrigeration systems.
EU ODS Reg. 1005/2009 / UK Ozone Regulation 2024The EU F-Gas Regulation 2024/573 implements an accelerated phase-down of HFCs measured in CO₂-equivalent tonnes. The UK has adopted similar phase-down schedules under its own retained regulation. Key milestones affecting vessels include:
Vessels that defer refrigerant conversion face increasing costs and availability risk as quotas tighten. Converting during a planned drydock — while supply and pricing are still manageable — is significantly more cost-effective than forced conversion under pressure.
EU Reg. 2024/573 — Annex I phase-down scheduleNo. Under both UK and EU F-Gas regulations, it is prohibited to add refrigerant to a system that is known to be leaking without first repairing the leak. An engineer must not top up a system where a leak is detected or suspected until the source has been identified and repaired.
Following a repair, a mandatory re-check leak test must be performed within 30 days (or 1 month under EU regulation) to confirm the repair is effective. Failure to comply exposes the operator and the servicing company to regulatory penalties.
If a vessel is in a port where immediate repair is not possible, the competent authority may in some circumstances permit temporary top-up under strict conditions — but this must not be treated as routine practice. Contact ANP Marine for emergency guidance in this situation.
UK F-Gas Reg. 2024 — Article 4(4)R407F is an HFC blend (R32/R125/R134a) with a GWP of 1,825. It is a proven retrofit option for R22 marine HVAC and refrigeration systems because it operates at similar pressures and temperatures to R22, reducing the need for major system modifications.
However, R407F is not a long-term solution under the F-Gas phase-down schedule — its GWP of 1,825 places it in the medium-term restriction category. For vessels undertaking R22 conversion in a drydock today, ANP Marine typically recommends evaluating R448A or R449A as the primary option (GWP 1,387 and 1,397 respectively), with R407F reserved for cases where system design or operational constraints make the lower-GWP blends unsuitable.
We provide a written refrigerant recommendation report for each system, covering compatibility, oil change requirements, TEV resizing, expected performance changes and long-term regulatory risk — so the chief engineer and superintendent can make an informed decision.
ANP Engineering Guidance — Refrigerant SelectionAfter any F-Gas work on a vessel or offshore facility, you should always request and retain the following:
ANP Marine produces all of the above as standard with every service and sends a complete documentation pack to the superintendent and vessel operator within 48 hours of job completion.
UK F-Gas Reg. 2024 — Articles 6, 8 & 10More F-Gas questions?
Ask ICE — our AI engineering assistant — or speak directly to one of our certified engineers.
Send us your vessel list, refrigerant types and next drydock dates. Our certified engineers will review your F-Gas compliance position, calculate CO₂-equivalent charges, identify systems requiring conversion and produce a prioritised action plan — at no obligation.
Refrigerant leaks are a regulatory emergency as well as an operational one. Our certified F-Gas engineers are available 24/7 and can mobilise within hours.