High-rise refrigerated fruit storage and distribution, using a NH3/CO2 fluid system, gives optimum results for stored products and company financials.

published Nov 30, 2010 - 1 pages

Mr. Klaas de Jong, owner of this very sophisticated high-rise fruit distribution centre in the Netherlands, can call on several decades of experience in this business. His first choice of refrigerant would always be ammonia, but if not permitted by the authorities, then the NH3/CO2 fluid solution has proven to be the next best. The plant was commissioned in 2007 and is located near the port in Rotterdam. The building is 20 meters high and can store 12,500 pallets, spread over 15 individually-con

Mr. Klaas de Jong, owner of this very sophisticated high-rise fruit distribution centre in the Netherlands, can call on several decades of experience in this business. His first choice of refrigerant would always be ammonia, but if not permitted by the authorities, then the NH3/CO2 fluid solution has proven to be the next best. The plant was commissioned in 2007 and is located near the port in Rotterdam. The building is 20 meters high and can store 12,500 pallets, spread over 15 individually-controlled temperature compartments.


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