HVAC Training and Programs | HVAC Training Goes Green

HVAC Training Goes Green

Like most industries, heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning (HVAC) is emphasizing green training as we forge ahead into the 21st century.  HVAC training is committed to the move toward building and maintaining greener technologies because furnaces and air conditioning units contribute to global warming.  For HVAC specialists working in the United States, there are many resources and ways to educate yourself for the benefit of your clients and the environment.

The brain child of the Partnership for Environmental Leadership, HVAC’s Mobile Green Classroom is a great place to look for greener HVAC training and leadership practices.

The HVAC Mobile Green Classroom is a state-of-the-art trailer with one mission: to travel around the country demonstrating the latest in green HVAC technologies.  New HVAC systems are consistently providing the same service as older equivalents at much higher efficiencies.  This is also true of other aspects of HVAC.  By keeping up to date on the newest technologies available, HVAC technicians are better able to provide these products and services to their customers.

The Obama Administration is adding specific policies to halt global warming, even as I write this article.   By making this a priority in their own work, HVAC technicians will benefit by completing training on green alternatives.

Efficient, well designed HVAC equipment supports comfort for homeowners and lower energy costs for residents.  Further, it lowers costs for apartment and landlords while diminishing tenant complaints.  While current legislation requires that HVAC energy loads be metered, it does not ensure heating and ventilation systems will meet adequate load forecasts.

Mechanical contractors frequently operate systems on excess energy outputs to ensure unit’s properly control climate.  This can lead to poor installation practices that precipitate oversizing. Oversizing causes high energy use, decreased equipment lifetimes, and less comfortable living environments.

The 2005 Building Energy Efficiency Standards requires specific guidelines for duct sealing and other HVAC insulation practices.  Available in Section 4.4 of the Residential Compliance Manual, HVAC technicians will benefit by familiarizing themselves with these updated standards in ducting and sealant design.  Though this 2005 HVAC legislation requires prescriptive compliance for ductwork, technicians who test for leakages on performance-based requirements will ensure the systems they manage are running at high efficiencies and adequate levels of comfort.

By sizing systems and equipment to meet historical load calculations, HVAC technicians and homeowners will see environmental and financial benefits in the long term.  HVAC technicians have a distinct opportunity to get training on the latest skills and green systems to best serve their communities.

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