Risk: Medium Cooling Tower Operational

Parker Hannifin Copper & Assembly Facility Cooling Tower, Greenfield, Tennessee

GREENFIELD, Tennessee, United States

Overview

Parker Hannifin Copper & Assembly Facility in Greenfield, Tennessee, operates a cooling tower for industrial processes. The facility supports metal fabrication and air-conditioning manufacturing.

Parker Hannifin Copper & Assembly Facility is a cooling tower installation located at 100 Parker Drive in Greenfield, Weakley County, Tennessee, United States. The facility is operational and serves industrial cooling needs for Parker Hannifin's copper and assembly operations. The facility operates under U.S. environmental regulations, including EPA refrigerant management requirements under the Clean Air Act. Cooling towers in Tennessee typically use evaporative cooling, which consumes water but offers high efficiency. The facility's NAICS codes (332116 for metal stamping and 333415 for air-conditioning manufacturing) indicate a moderate-scale industrial operation. Cooling towers play a critical role in maintaining process temperatures for manufacturing. This facility's location in rural western Tennessee highlights the importance of industrial cooling infrastructure in supporting regional manufacturing and employment.

Environmental context

Cooling towers in Tennessee often use evaporative cooling, which consumes significant water but provides high operational efficiency. Refrigerant management is critical to minimize global-warming potential, with U.S. regulations phasing down high-GWP refrigerants under the AIM Act. Water conservation and energy efficiency (COP) are key environmental considerations for such facilities.

Frequently asked questions

The cooling tower is located at 100 Parker Drive, Greenfield, Tennessee 38230-3957, in Weakley County, United States.

This cooling tower provides process cooling for Parker Hannifin's copper and assembly operations, supporting metal stamping and air-conditioning manufacturing.

Cooling towers in the U.S. must comply with EPA regulations under the Clean Air Act, including refrigerant management and leak repair requirements. The AIM Act mandates phasedown of high-GWP hydrofluorocarbons.

Key environmental factors include water consumption (especially for evaporative cooling), energy efficiency (coefficient of performance), and refrigerant global-warming potential. Proper maintenance reduces environmental impact.

The facility serves metal fabrication (NAICS 332116) and air-conditioning and refrigeration equipment manufacturing (NAICS 333415), indicating a role in HVAC and industrial cooling.

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