Sulphur hexafluoride (SF6) is one of the six types of greenhouse gas covered by the Kyoto Protocol. Its global warming potential (GWP) is 23,500 times greater than carbon dioxide, making it potentially the most potent greenhouse gas on earth. It also has a lifetime in the atmosphere of up to 3,200 years, compared with around 100 years for carbon dioxide. However, SF6 gas is an excellent dielectric insulator that has been used since 1965 for electrical insulation because of its very high electrical rigidity. Worldwide, 80% of the SF6 produced is used in high-voltage AIS circuit breakers and GIS. High-voltage electrical equipment is not sealed and leaks by design. A normative leakage rate has been defined for GIS (1% until 2003, then 0.5% until 2022). By 2022, the leakage rate has been reduced to 0.1%/year for equipment using SF6 and 0.5%/year for equipment using alternative gases. For AIS circuit breakers, the leakage rate of 0.5%/year was incorporated in 2010. By the end of 2022, RTE’s installed base represented a mass of around 580 tons of SF6, with average annual emissions of 5.2 tons over [2017-2021], falling steadily over the period, and 3.82 tons in 2022, year of COLIBRI’s industrialization. Beyond environmental aspects, appearance of leaks necessarily entails maintenance operations ranging from refilling to maintain electrical insulation, to switching off equipment in order to change seals. These operations are costly (labor/supplies) and also require electrical interlocking, which increases the complexity of maintenance planning. To limit SF6 emissions and fight against global warming, while at the same time limiting the impact on operating and maintenance resources, RTE has developed a process for sealing GIS by injecting a fluid into the flange connections between the compartments during operation: the COLIBRI process.