membership

NASRC Welcomes New Membership & Communications Coordinator

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NASRC is excited to welcome Jeanne Ackerman to our team! Jeanne joined us in April as the Membership & Communications Coordinator. Jeanne will help to scale our core initiatives and accelerate our mission through the administration of our membership program, coordination of our communications efforts, and management of logistics for NASRC events, meetings, and webinars. 

Prior to joining the NASRC, Jeanne spent 17 years at CoolSys (formerly Source Refrigeration) primarily working with the grocery industry. In her time at CoolSys, Jeanne worked in Sales & Marketing, Training and was also the Executive Assistant.

“I am proud to be part of NASRC and look forward to working with the team to make a difference in removing the barriers of natural refrigerants.” – Jeanne Ackerman

Welcoming Jeanne to our growing team will accelerate our impact and drive us closer to accomplishing our mission of making natural refrigerants a feasible business choice for supermarkets!

Learn more about our staff here.

NASRC Releases New Directory to Support Supermarkets in Transition to Climate-Friendly Refrigeration

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Mill Valley, California - The North American Sustainable Refrigeration Council (NASRC), a 501(c)(3) environmental nonprofit, has launched a new directory to connect industry thought leaders who are supporting supermarkets in the transition to climate-friendly refrigerants. The directory showcases NASRC’s 130+ member companies and the services they offer, allowing users to search by product, service type, service territory, and refrigerant among other categories.

“We were founded to bring stakeholders together to take collective action and overcome the barriers to natural refrigerant adoption,” comments Danielle Wright, NASRC executive director. “This directory reflects that principle by streamlining connections with the organizations and companies that have positioned themselves at the forefront of industry progress.”

As the threat of climate change accelerates, the need for sustainable refrigeration is growing. Transitioning to climate-friendly refrigerants is one of the single most effective ways to permanently reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Natural refrigerants - including ammonia, carbon dioxide, and hydrocarbons - are climate-friendly alternatives to traditional hydrofluorocarbon (HFC) refrigerants. Unfortunately, they are not yet widely adopted in the U.S. due to a lack of effective and consistent policies to phase down HFCs. Moreover, supermarkets face a unique set of market barriers that prevent adoption of natural refrigerants, such as upfront cost premiums, a shortage of workforce training, and a lack of performance data.

To address the market barriers, NASRC has created a membership network of over 130 industry stakeholders, including 24,000 supermarket locations, that contribute to NASRC solutions driving the data, resources, and support supermarkets need to feasibly adopt climate-friendly natural refrigerants. “Our members are our biggest strength and together have the power to drive solutions forward,” says Wright. “Because of our vast network, we’re uniquely positioned to house a simple platform to facilitate connections between stakeholders and, as a result, accelerate solutions.”

Nearly 14,000 US Supermarket Locations are NASRC members

The North America Sustainable Refrigeration Council (NASRC) is excited to announce that our  end-user membership now encompasses nearly 14,000 supermarkets. 

“The growth of this organization has been amazing,” says Keilly Witman, owner of KW Refrigerant Management Strategy and former head of the EPA’s GreenChill Partnership. “Supermarket end-users are excited, because the NASRC gets things done. After years of all talk and no action about the hurdles that stand in the way of natural refrigerants in this industry, we finally have an organization that flips it around - it’s all about action.”

Most of the NASRC’s efforts focus on overcoming hurdles in three areas: service contractors and technicians, cost, and codes and standards.

The main programs that address hurdles related to service contractors and technicians focus on matching end-users with trained, experienced service contractors, ensuring clear communication between end-users and contractors who are working on their first all-natural refrigerant store, and collaborating with traditional service technician training organizations to ensure that technicians have the training they need to successfully install and manage an all-natural store. 

The NASRC’s Natural Refrigerants Service Network, for instance, is an online tool that allows refrigeration service contractors to provide information about their natural refrigerant experience, along with the areas where they do business. End-users can join the online network and mine that data by geographic location and the natural refrigerant they are looking to use.

“The NASRC has just begun to make the most out of this tool; the ideas are endless,” says Bryan Beitler of Source Refrigeration. “Just the webinar the NASRC held for service technicians explaining the new requirements of the Section 608 amendments made it worthwhile to participate.”

The NASRC’s Return on Investment Progress Group is working to overcome the causes that tend to cause natural refrigerants to cost more than traditional centralized DX systems.

“There are big cost hurdles, like economies of scale, and there are smaller cost hurdles, like the lack of distributors that carry refrigerant-grade CO2,” says Mike Ellinger of Whole Foods Market. “The distributor problem sounds like its a small thing, but it costs money, and those costs build up over time, if you don’t have a solution for it.” 

In response, the NASRC has begun cooperating with HARDI, the trade association for HVACR distributors, to bring traditional distributors into the natural refrigerant supply chain. According to NASRC Executive Director, Danielle Wright, the NASRC and HARDI will work to find a distributor in any area of the country where an end user wants to open a natural refrigerant store. 

The codes and standards hurdle may be the toughest nut to crack, says Wright. “The organizations that write standards for supermarket refrigeration may not be aware of how urgent it is to get standards in place.” She cites the fact that California plans to require supermarkets to use refrigerants with a GWP less than 150 in just a few years.

“We are eager to work with ASHRAE and UL and discuss how to get these standards done, but they have few people on their committees who come from the refrigeration world, much less from the natural refrigerant world.”

“Is it any wonder that supermarket end-users are flocking to this organization,” says Witman, “given its track record in under three years of going to bat for supermarkets?” 

“We don’t really have to recruit supermarket end-users,” reports Wright. “They come to us, because they’ve heard about the progress we’ve already made in all of the areas that have prevented them from moving forward with naturals in the past. No problem is too small, or too big, for us to tackle.”