Overview
ACTION PLUMBING & HEATING operates a cooling tower in Sandy, Utah, serving the Salt Lake County area. The facility supports local industrial or commercial cooling needs.
ACTION PLUMBING & HEATING is a cooling tower facility located at 213 West Cottage Ave in Sandy, Utah, within Salt Lake County. This operational cooling tower provides essential heat rejection for plumbing and heating operations, supporting the local infrastructure in the United States. Cooling towers in the United States typically operate under ASHRAE 15 safety standards for refrigeration systems and are subject to federal regulations regarding refrigerant management. The facility's capacity and specific technology are not detailed, but cooling towers in this sector commonly use evaporative cooling, which involves water consumption and potential drift emissions. As a cooling tower serving a plumbing and heating business, this facility plays a role in maintaining operational efficiency for local services. Its location in Sandy, part of the Salt Lake City metropolitan area, places it within a region with varying climate conditions that influence cooling demand and water usage.
Environmental context
Cooling towers like this one often use evaporative cooling, which consumes significant water and can lead to drift losses. The environmental impact depends on refrigerant type and system efficiency. In Utah, water scarcity is a concern, making water-efficient operation important. Compliance with the Kigali Amendment and EPA regulations on refrigerants helps mitigate global-warming potential.
Frequently asked questions
The cooling tower is located at 213 West Cottage Ave, Sandy, Utah 84070-1432, in Salt Lake County, United States.
The cooling tower is currently operational, serving the cooling needs of ACTION PLUMBING & HEATING.
Cooling towers in the US must comply with ASHRAE 15 for refrigeration safety and EPA regulations under the Clean Air Act, including refrigerant management and leak detection. The Kigali Amendment also phases down high-GWP refrigerants.
Cooling towers can consume large amounts of water and may use refrigerants with high global-warming potential. Evaporative cooling systems also produce drift that can affect local air quality. Efficient operation and low-GWP refrigerants reduce these impacts.
This cooling tower supports the operations of ACTION PLUMBING & HEATING in Sandy, Utah, contributing to the local industrial and commercial cooling capacity in the Salt Lake City metropolitan area.
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