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Managing Supplier Compliance During the Low-GWP Refrigerant Transition
The HVACR industry is currently facing one of its biggest changes in years. As we move toward low-Global Warming Potential (GWP) refrigerants to meet EPA standards, the way you manage your business must change, too. For contractors, a great installation is only half the job. The other half is proving your business is a safe bet through solid data.
With new rules coming from the American Innovation & Manufacturing Act (AIM Act), such as lower 15-pound leak detection thresholds and mandatory automatic leak detection for large systems, your list of suppliers and their safety requirements is shifting. If your vendors aren’t compliant with these standards, your company carries the risk of heavy EPA fines, operational shutdowns, and even the loss of insurance coverage. Here is a practical guide to auditing your vendors to ensure they have the right certifications and digital records before your team starts the job.
Why Compliance Matters More Now
Insurance costs for property owners are rising due to more lawsuits and expensive damage claims. In fact, national multifamily insurance costs rose 55% between 2021 and 2024, largely because the “liability market” is becoming more difficult for businesses to get coverage due to a 300% increase in jury awards over $10 million since 2020. Additionally, water damage remains a primary driver of these costs, as the average insurance payout for such a claim now ranges between $11,098 and $12,514. To keep their own insurance affordable, your clients are checking their vendors more closely. Your compliance data—like your safety records and insurance certificates—is now the “key” that lets you onto the job site. If that data is missing, you become a liability that clients will stay away from.
How to Audit Your Vendors
To keep your business moving forward, you need a proactive way to handle your suppliers and their paperwork.
â—Ź Set Up Early Alerts: Don’t wait for an expired certificate to stop your work or freeze your payments. Set reminders for 30, 60, or 90 days before a document expires. This gives your partners time to update their forms so your status stays “green-lighted”.
â—Ź Sign up for a centralized platform that manages vendor relationships: Scattered folders and expired PDFs are a cause for concern that can slow down your operations. To avoid the hassle of searching for necessary documentation, you need a single digital “source of truth” where all your vendor data lives. Using a centralized platform like VendorAccess.com allows you to keep your credentials in one place, making them easy to share with clients and ensuring you stay in a “ready-to-work” status. This type of system also protects your business by vetting subcontractor paperwork before they ever turn a wrench, which is critical since an uninsured subcontractor can void your own insurance coverage altogether. Furthermore, keeping your digital W-9s and tax forms updated in one hub eliminates manual data entry errors that often lead to “missing” checks and delayed payments.
Compliance is a Competitive Edge
In the HVACR world, speed is everything. When an emergency repair comes up, property managers look for “ready-to-work” vendors who are already vetted. If your paperwork is done and correct, you stay at the top of their list.
Staying compliant is a good way to protect your business, while also helping you market it. By treating your certifications as a core part of your strategy, you protect your profits and stay ahead of the competition. Digital tools are the foundation that allows your team to do what they do best—provide expert service.
Source https://www.achrnews.com/articles/166068-managing-supplier-compliance-during-the-low-gwp-refrigerant-transition