Risk: Low Cooling Tower Operational

East Bay Machine & Sheet Metal Cooling Tower, Concord, California

CONCORD, California, United States

Overview

East Bay Machine & Sheet Metal operates a cooling tower in Concord, California, supporting industrial manufacturing processes. The facility is part of the region's diverse industrial sector.

East Bay Machine & Sheet Metal is a cooling tower facility located at 1030 Shary Ct, Concord, California, within Contra Costa County. The facility is operational and serves the industrial manufacturing sector, as indicated by its NAICS codes covering machinery, transportation equipment, and furniture manufacturing. Cooling towers in California operate under state and federal regulations, including ASHRAE 15 for refrigeration safety and the Kigali Amendment to the Montreal Protocol for refrigerant management. The facility's scale is typical for a manufacturing support system, with capacity likely in the range of small to medium industrial cooling loads. The environmental significance of this cooling tower relates to its water and energy use. Evaporative cooling towers consume water and electricity, and their efficiency (COP) impacts operational costs and environmental footprint. Proper maintenance and refrigerant management are key to minimizing global-warming potential.

Environmental context

Cooling towers in California face environmental considerations including water consumption from evaporative cooling and energy efficiency (COP). Refrigerant choice and leak prevention are critical due to global-warming potential. State regulations align with the Kigali Amendment to phase down high-GWP refrigerants.

Frequently asked questions

East Bay Machine & Sheet Metal is located at 1030 Shary Ct, Concord, California 94518, in Contra Costa County, United States.

This cooling tower provides process cooling for industrial manufacturing operations, supporting machinery and equipment in sectors such as air conditioning, heating, and commercial refrigeration manufacturing.

Cooling towers in California must comply with ASHRAE 15 safety standards, the California Air Resources Board (CARB) refrigerant regulations, and the federal Clean Air Act. The Kigali Amendment to the Montreal Protocol also governs refrigerant phase-downs.

Evaporative cooling towers consume water through evaporation and blowdown. Water efficiency is a key operational metric, and facilities may use water treatment to reduce consumption and environmental impact.

Refrigerants have varying global-warming potentials (GWP). The EU F-Gas Regulation and Kigali Amendment aim to phase down high-GWP refrigerants. Proper leak detection and recovery are essential to minimize emissions.

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