Een foto van de Van Nelle Fabriek, het kantoor van Bluace

F-gases

F-gas administration within one service and maintenance solution

What are F-gases?

Koudemiddelen en F-gassen in koel- en klimaatinstallaties - Bluace
Veranderingen door de F-gassenverordening EU 2024/573 - Bluace

F-gas Regulation 2024/573 — what is changing?

The revised F-gas Regulation (EU 2024/573) replaces Regulation 517/2014 and has been directly applicable in all EU member states since 2024. Its core: further reduced HFC quotas on the European market, stricter product-specific bans by application category and a phase-down path towards natural refrigerants. Three changes hit installers and owners the hardest: (1) new certification requirements that also cover NH3, CO2 and hydrocarbons, (2) tightened leak-check intervals based on CO2-equivalent and (3) expanded registration and reporting obligations.

The full policy framework is published by the Dutch Environment Information Point (IPLO). Bluace tracks each amendment and translates new requirements directly into the F-gas module.

Lekcontrole en logboekplicht voor F-gassen-installaties - Bluace

Leak checks and logbook obligation

Enforcement and fines from €1,500

ILT-toezicht en boetes bij werken zonder F-gas-certificaat - Bluace
F-gassen-module in Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central - Bluace

F-gas module in Business Central

The solution runs as SaaS in the Microsoft Cloud, receives automatic updates and is accessible from any device with internet — office and field teams work on the same data in real time.

Frequently asked questions about F-gases

Click a question to view the answer.

What is changing with the new F-gas Regulation in 2026?
The revised F-gas Regulation (EU 2024/573) lowers the quotas for HFCs on the European market, expands product bans, requires a single combined certificate covering both F-gases and natural refrigerants, and sets stricter requirements for leak checks and registration. The Dutch Human Environment and Transport Inspectorate (ILT) is enforcing more strictly on uncertified work from 2026 onwards.
Which certificate do I need to work on F-gas installations?
Companies need a company certificate based on BRL 100, and technicians need a personal certificate based on BRL 200 (categories A1, A2, B, C, D or E depending on the type of work and refrigerant volume). Independent technicians (sole traders) need both certificates. From 2026, the new certificate also covers NH3, CO2 and hydrocarbons.
What are the logbook obligations for F-gases?
Each installation must have an up-to-date logbook recording the refrigerant type, the quantity in kilograms, the CO2-equivalent, the dates and outcomes of leak checks, and all mutations (top-ups, recoveries, repairs). The logbook must be available for immediate inspection by the regulator on request.
When will HFC refrigerants be banned?
There is no general ban on a single date; the EU is phasing out HFCs gradually through declining quotas and product-specific bans per application category. The path runs until 2050. GWP limits apply earlier to new installations than to existing systems — topping up existing installations remains permitted for longer, but gradually becomes more expensive and scarcer.
What are the fines for working without an F-gas certificate?
According to the Dutch Human Environment and Transport Inspectorate (ILT), a fine of €1,500 or more can be imposed for working without a valid certificate, potentially supplemented by an administrative penalty. The ILT also checks whether the company certification and the logbooks at the installation are in order.

More questions? Visit our full FAQ page with answers about cloud, security, integrations, implementation and pricing.

Interested in more information about F-gas administration?

Gertjan Lijmbach

+31858200802

info@bluace.nl

Gertjan Lijmbach - sales team Bluace
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