
CO2-ammonia ice rink installed in Sweden
The system, designed by Swedish firm EKA (Energi & Kylanalys), specialists in the field of ice arenas, replaced the previous ammonia-based system.
The system, designed by Swedish firm EKA (Energi & Kylanalys), specialists in the field of ice arenas, replaced the previous ammonia-based system.
In Kristianstad, Sweden, Advansor is teaming up with an installation company to put CO2 racks in a huge warehouse.
Ammonia has long been the refrigerant of choice for ice rink installers. But it is facing growing competition from another natural refrigerant – CO2.
Heat exchanger, tied to the U-Turn NH3 separator, to serve growing market for cascade systems.
The Swedish transcritical CO2 supplier sees the U.S. food retail sector turning towards natural refrigerant systems.
Natural refrigerant CO2 will become the refrigerant of choice for ice rinks, argued Swedish refrigeration engineering consultants Energi & Kylanalys (EKA) at last week’s Gustav Lorentzen conference in Edinburgh.
Swedish manufacturer Green & Cool launched its new condensing unit for CO2 systems at the ATMOsphere Europe conference in Barcelona, targeting small-scale applications like convenience stores and petrol stations.
After one year of operation in Gimo, Sweden, the first ice rink in Europe cooled purely with CO2 technology is significantly reducing energy consumption and showing the huge potential of R744 to revolutionise the ice rink industry.
The largest shopping mall in Scandinavia will officially open its doors in November this year. In light of its dedicated focus on installing environmentally friendly technology, leading manufacturer Green & Cool will equip many of the mall’s leading retailers with its CO2 refrigeration systems.
The tiny Northern Swedish town of Gällivare has become home to the one of the country’s largest CO2refrigeration installations.