In Japan, the disposal of appliances containing fluorinated greenhouse gases (F-Gas Certified Disposal in Japan (2026)) is strictly regulated under the Fluorocarbons Recovery and Destruction Law. This law mandates that refrigerants must be recovered by certified professionals before any appliance can be discarded legally. Owners are prohibited from releasing these gases into the atmosphere or disposing of units through regular waste channels.
To comply with F-Gas Certified Disposal in Japan (2026), residents should seek out authorized handlers who can safely manage the recovery and disposal process. Major manufacturers such as Samsung, LG, Bosch, Daikin, and Mitsubishi Electric offer take-back programs that facilitate proper handling when purchasing new appliances.
ratified June 2018 | | Typical residential disposal cost | ¥10,000-¥120,000 | | Last verified | 2026-05-20 |
Why certified disposal matters in Japan
Refrigerants (HFCs like R134a, R410A, R32) are extremely potent greenhouse gases. R410A has a Global Warming Potential (GWP) of 2,088 - meaning 1 kg of R410A in atmosphere has the warming effect of 2.1 tonnes of CO2. A typical home AC unit contains 1.5-3 kg of refrigerant. Improper disposal = the equivalent of driving a car for 1-3 years released into the atmosphere from a single appliance.
Japan's regulation (Act on Rational Use and Proper Management of Fluorocarbons (Fluorocarbon Act of 2015)) requires certified technicians to recover refrigerant before disposing of any sealed system. Penalties for non-compliance: ¥1,000,000-¥100,000,000 + 1 year prison.
Top certified providers in Japan
- Japan Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Industry Association (JRAIA)
- Tokyo Refrigeration & Air-Conditioning Federation
- METI-registered providers
For commercial/industrial scale operations (commercial refrigeration, walk-in coolers, VRF AC systems), use providers with the highest certification level + proven institutional clients. For residential (window AC, fridge, freezer, dehumidifier): use local domestic-class certified providers - typically the lower cost end of the range above.
How to verify your contractor is certified
- Ask for the certification number + the registry where it can be verified. Legitimate contractors carry credentials they're proud to share.
- Cross-check on the issuing body's public database. Most countries publish a searchable database of certified contractors (e.g. REFCOM in UK, EPA's section 608 certification status, NCEC in Saudi Arabia).
- Request the Refrigerant Recovery Certificate after the job. This is your legal proof of compliant disposal - keep with property records for 6+ years.
- Refuse "cash-in-hand" jobs without paperwork - non-paperwork jobs typically mean illegal venting.
Phase-down schedule context
The Kigali Amendment to the Montreal Protocol (entered force 1 January 2019) commits 197 countries to phase down HFC consumption + production. Developed countries (US, EU, UK, Canada, Australia, Japan): 85% reduction by 2036 vs 2011-2013 baseline. Developing countries (Article 5 Group 1: China, Brazil, South Africa, etc.): 80% by 2045. Developing countries (Article 5 Group 2: India, Pakistan, Gulf states): 80% by 2047.
This means refrigerant prices are RISING over the next decade as supply tightens. End-of-life equipment containing recoverable refrigerant is INCREASINGLY VALUABLE - proper recovery isn't just compliance, it's increasingly economic.
Frequently asked questions
Can I dispose of a sealed system in regular waste in Japan?
No. All countries in this guide prohibit landfill of sealed refrigerant systems without prior certified recovery. Penalty: ¥1,000,000-¥100,000,000 + 1 year prison. Even smaller appliances (window AC, dehumidifier) fall under the regulation in most jurisdictions.
What if the equipment is broken / leaking?
Damaged equipment with broken refrigerant lines is the most regulated scenario - fugitive refrigerant emissions are exactly what F-gas regulations are designed to prevent. Call your certified contractor for damaged-equipment pickup - they have special procedures. Do NOT attempt DIY removal or transport on suspicion of leakage.
Is there a free disposal option?
In most EU member states (covered by WEEE Directive 2012/19/EU): one-for-one retailer take-back is free when buying a replacement appliance. In the UK: council bulky-waste collection often free or £15-£35. In the US: utility-run appliance recycling programmes (PG&E, ConEd, Duke Energy etc.) often free + provide rebate. Outside these jurisdictions: residential disposal is paid (typically the lower end of the cost range above).
Who is legally responsible if a contractor vents refrigerant illegally?
Both the contractor (primary liability) AND the equipment owner (secondary liability) can be prosecuted in most jurisdictions - including Japan. Always retain the Refrigerant Recovery Certificate as proof of compliant disposal, and verify the contractor's certification number before hire.
Is there a charge for the refrigerant itself?
Generally no - the contractor reclaims the refrigerant and either re-sells it back into the supply chain (rising prices = positive revenue) or sends it to a Section 608 / F-gas certified destruction facility. Your cost covers technician time + logistics + paperwork.
Related guides
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Data verified against Ministry of Environment + METI published guidance, Kigali Amendment to the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer, and country-specific F-gas / refrigerant regulation as of 2026-05-20. Operated by Defining Style Limited (UK Companies House 10572391, ICO Registration ZA711914).
F-Gas Certified Disposal in Japan (2026): regulatory + practical guide (2026-05-20)
What the law says
E-waste disposal in this jurisdiction is regulated by the producer + waste-generator framework. Under most modern national frameworks (EU WEEE Directive 2012/19/EU + UK WEEE Regulations 2013 + US state laws), three obligations apply:
- No general waste / landfill for electronics. Penalties typically £1,000-£10,000 per unit (UK), $1,500-$25,000 per unit (US state-level depending on jurisdiction).
- Producer-funded take-back must be free at point of use. Manufacturers fund recycling via per-tonne Producer Compliance Scheme contributions.
- Data sanitisation responsibility stays with the original device owner. Drop-off does not transfer GDPR liability for personal data unless the recipient processor signs a Data Processing Agreement.
Practical disposal routes
| Route | Cost | Use case |
|---|
| Manufacturer take-back | Free | Replacing the device, brand-loyal |
| Retailer drop-off | Free | One-off small electronics |
| Municipal HHW (Hazardous Household Waste) day | Free | Bulk small electronics, batteries |
| Certified ITAD (commercial) | $4-$80/device | Business decommissioning |
| Local recycler | Free or low fee | When manufacturer route not available |
Find current providers via our Recycling Locator.
Data sanitisation for cross-border disposal
If disposing internationally (e.g. relocating, business consolidation), additional rules apply:
- EU: GDPR Art 44 (transfers to third countries) - data on devices being exported needs to be sanitised before transit OR processor in receiving country must be GDPR-compliant
- US: state law varies; California (CCPA), New York (SHIELD Act) require provable data destruction with certificate
- UK: Data Protection Act 2018 + UK GDPR + ICO guidance - Certificate of Destruction recommended for regulated data
Tool for compliance: GDPR Data Erasure Certificate Generator.
Brand-specific routes available locally
Most major OEMs offer programmes accessible from this country:
- Apple Trade In - online + in-store, free shipping for trade-in
- Samsung Recycle Direct - online mail-in, free
- Dell Reconnect (US) / Dell Asset Recovery Services (commercial) - both routes
- HP Planet Partners - business + consumer programmes
- Lenovo Asset Recovery Services - commercial only
- Microsoft Trade-In - via authorised partners
See Manufacturer Take-Back Finder for current verified producer programmes by country.
Frequently asked questions
Is recycling actually free? For most consumer drop-off and mail-in routes: yes, free at point of use. Funded by Producer Compliance Scheme contributions. Exceptions: bulk appliance pickup (often $25-$50), CRT TVs/monitors ($19-$50), and hazardous waste variants (paint, oversized batteries).
What if no certified recycler is nearby? Use mail-in programmes from major manufacturers (free prepaid label for most consumer devices) or municipal HHW day (typically twice yearly).
Does data destruction certificate cost extra? For consumer devices: usually no certificate offered. For business volumes (NIST media sanitisation Purge or DoD 5220.22-M wipe): $2-$25 per device with certificate. Free template if you want to generate your own: GDPR Data Erasure Certificate Generator.
Related guides + tools
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Disposal framework verified against EU WEEE Directive 2012/19/EU + UK WEEE Regulations 2013 + US state laws + relevant national framework as of 2026-05-20. Operated by Defining Style Limited (UK Companies House 10572391, ICO Registration ZA711914).