Carrier Transicold to Standardize More Environmentally Sustainable Refrigerant
Later this year, new-generation refrigerant R-452A will become the standard for new Carrier Transicold transport refrigeration units in North America.

Later this year, new-generation refrigerant R-452A will become the standard for new Carrier Transicold transport refrigeration units in North America.
Photo: Carrier Transicold
With significantly reduced global warming potential, new-generation refrigerant R-452A will become the standard for new Carrier Transicold transport refrigeration units in North America beginning in October.
“Carrier Transicold truck and trailer refrigeration units have been qualified for R‑452A since 2017, and it has been available as a customer-specified option for several years,” said Bill Maddox, senior manager of product management for Carrier Transicold, in a press release. “R‑452A is already standard with some of our newer units, and we’re pleased to expand this standardization to the broader array of Carrier Transicold products, effectively halving the refrigerant [global warming potential] of our transport refrigeration offerings.”
Later this year, R-452A with a global warming potential of 2,140, will become the standard refrigerant for all Carrier Transicold models that currently use R-404A, which has a global warming potential of 3,922.
The timing of the transition will help California customers placing orders for 2023, according to the company. The California Air Resources Board this year approved a measure requiring all new transport refrigeration units placed into service in 2023 to use a refrigerant with a global warming potential of less than 2,200.
In 2025, Canada will require refrigerants with a global warming potential of less than 2,200 in new transport refrigeration units, to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in accordance with the Kigali Agreement of the Montreal Protocol.
Previously, there was a significant cost differential between the new and traditional refrigerants, however over the last several years that has diminished with changing demand and refrigerant production trends, helping to encourage adoption of the more sustainable R-452A, company officials said.
Maddox added some customers may consider switching refrigerants for units already in service, noting that with relative ease, Carrier Transicold customers can transition newer existing equipment from R-404A to R-452A. Unlike some competitive systems that require replacement of a thermal expansion valve when converting, late-model Carrier Transicold systems – those with an electronic expansion valve – require a software upgrade along with purging the R-404A and replacing it with R-452A. On Carrier Transicold truck units and older trailer units that use a mechanical expansion valve, the valve will require a manual adjustment or, in some cases, replacement based on the age of the model.
Standardizing on lower global warming potential refrigerants is part of Carrier’s commitment to reducing its customers' carbon footprint by more than one gigaton, while also achieving carbon neutral operations by 2030, as outlined in its Environmental, Social and Governance Goals.
More Equipment

EPA Proposal Could Ease 2027 Truck Costs and Buying Uncertainty
The proposal doesn't change the tougher NOx standard, but it would revise key implementation requirements that manufacturers say have driven up costs and complicated fleet purchasing decisions.
Read More →
Cummins, Paccar Ease DEF Derates After EPA Guidance
Updated diesel engine software gives truck operators more time to address emissions-system issues while staying compliant with EPA emissions standards.
Read More →
America at 250: How the Truck Helped Connect a Continent
America was founded on revolutionary ideas, but it was built by movement. For 250 years, the nation has depended on ever-better ways to move people, products, and prosperity across a vast continent. No machine has carried that mission further — or more faithfully — than the truck.
Read More →
Mack Unveils America 250 Tribute Truck to Celebrate Nation's Semiquincentennial
Just in time for the Fourth of July! Mack unveils a brand-new patriotic, limited-edition, red, white, and blue truck wrap.
Read More →
Enhance Fleet Performance with High-Efficiency Auxiliary Power Units
Drive sustainable cost savings while increasing driver comfort during short- and long-haul logistics operations.
Read More →
Rush Expands Gulf Coast Peterbilt Network With Louisiana Acquisition
The expanded Rush network gives fleets additional sales, service, leasing and collision repair support across Louisiana's major trucking markets.
Read More →
Photos: Shell SuperRigs Light Up Bristol Tennessee
Kenny Ziglar II of Rawlins, Wyo., captured Best of Show honors for the second consecutive year with his 2007 Peterbilt 379, nicknamed “Scrapin By,” at the 44th Annual Shell Rotella SuperRigs competition held June 25-27 at Bristol Motor Speedway in Bristol, Tenn.
Read More →
Waabi, Volvo Claim Breakthrough in Scaling Autonomous Trucking
Waabi says its AI-powered virtual driver successfully transferred to Volvo Autonomous Solutions' Volvo VNL Autonomous platform without retraining or additional data, a milestone the companies say could dramatically accelerate commercialization of autonomous trucks.
Read More →
Why the Mack Pioneer Signals a New Era in Class 8 Truck Design
After a public-road drive through eastern Pennsylvania, one thing became clear: Mack's new Pioneer isn't simply packed with technology -- it's been engineered around the driver in ways that could redefine long-haul trucking.
Read More →
Mack Defense Secures $47 Million to Continue Military Dump Truck Production
President Trump visited Mack Defense’s Macungie, Pennsylvania, facility on June 23 to tout a $47 million Heavy Dump Truck order.
Read More →

