Why Buy Green?
Many considerations go into buying a new car or light truck. You'll
consider price, styling, comfort, performance, safety, reliability,
and of course, how well the vehicle will serve your needs. The decision
comes down to cost versus value: how much you are willing to pay
for the features you want to get. But the costs of car use go beyond
what's on the sticker and what you'll spend on fuel and repairs.
The toll that cars and trucks take on the environment is often hidden
but always very real. This toll includes unhealthy air pollution,
oil spills and fouling of water supplies, damage to habitats, and
global climate disruption. If you care about the environment, then
what you value goes beyond performance or styling and the options
featured in the showroom.
GreenerCars.org will help you choose a greener vehicle, one that
is cleaner and more fuel-efficient, minimizing harm to the environment
while meeting your transportation needs.
- For families with several vehicles, the pollution from their
cars, vans, sport utilities, and pickup trucks is often greater
than that from electricity and heating fuel use, waste disposal,
and other household activities.
- Automobile pollution can be more
dangerous than similar amounts of pollution from large sources
such as power plants, since car and truck emissions are quite literally "in
your face" where
we live, work, shop, and play.
- Much more will have to be done to
clean up cars and light trucks in order to avoid pollution alerts
and bring air quality up to more healthful levels in many U.S.
cities and regions.
Car and truck pollution not only harms our health
in the present, but also contributes to global warming, bringing
greater problems in years to come. A watchword of environmentalism
is the concept of "sustainability." An action is sustainable
if it serves our needs today without jeopardizing the ability of
future generations (our children and grandchildren) to meet their
needs. The large amount of energy consumed and pollution produced
by cars and trucks is the biggest reason our transportation system
is not sustainable.
Climate Disruption and Global Warming Pollution
Carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from the consumption
of gasoline, diesel, and other fossil fuels are the principal cause
of global warming, which brings health and economic risks from climate
change.
- The United States is the world's largest emitter of CO2 and
our emissions are still rising steadily. It will take decades before
many rapidly growing economies reach our levels of CO2 pollution
per person.
- American cars and light trucks alone account for more fossil
fuel CO2 emissions than the total nationwide emissions of all but
four other countries in the world.
- Buying more fuel-efficient cars and light trucks is one of the
single biggest steps we can take to reduce global warming.
Making motor vehicles cleaner and more efficient is
an important step toward sustainable transportation. A large part
of this task is up to automakers, but choosing a greener vehicle
is a step you can take that will head us in the right direction.
Today's automobiles—this website's general term
for cars, pickup trucks, station wagons, minivans, sport utilities,
and other personal motor vehicles—are made much cleaner than
those of a generation ago. Nevertheless, they remain among the largest
causes of environmental damage. Environmental impacts start when
automobiles are made, continue throughout their life on the road,
and don't end even when the vehicles are scrapped, since waste disposal
creates pollution, too.
Health Impacts of Car and Truck Pollution
Even the cleanest and most efficient vehicle on the
market today still pollutes the air and otherwise damages the environment.
A number of air pollutants are associated with automobiles:
- Fine airborne particulate matter (PM) causes lung trouble—shortness
of breath, worsening of respiratory diseases and heart conditions,
lung damage, and cancer.
- Nitrogen oxides (NOx) aggravate respiratory problems, both directly
and indirectly, by forming PM and smog; NOx also causes acid rain
and damages aquatic environments.
- Sulfur dioxide (SO2) also irritates the lungs, and it contributes
to forming PM as well as acid rain.
- Hydrocarbons (HC) are volatile organic compounds that cause
smog and are toxic and carcinogenic.
- Carbon monoxide (CO) is a poisonous gas that impairs the flow
of oxygen to the brain and other parts of the body.
- Carbon dioxide (CO2) is not normally harmful, but as already
noted, the huge amount of CO2 released by burning gasoline and
other fossil fuels is causing global warming.
A gallon of gasoline weighs just over 6 pounds. When
burned, the carbon in it combines with oxygen from the air to produce
about 19 pounds of CO2. But counting the energy that went into making
and distributing the fuel, the total global warming impact is equivalent
to 25 pounds of CO2 emissions per gallon.
Understanding the polluting effects of automobiles
can help one appreciate the importance of considering a vehicle's
greenness (or lack of greenness) when it comes time to purchase one.
More in-depth information on why cars and trucks aren't ever truly "green" can
be found in our "Automobiles and the Environment" article.
Greener Transport Also Means Reducing Driving
A vehicle's greenness depends not only on its design, but also on
how it is used. A car is greener when it's carrying two people rather
than one and it's greener still with three. And it's greenest of
all if left at home when there's a cleaner way to go: by foot or
by bicycle, by bus or by train, and even by wire (telecommuting or
videoconferencing). Consider your opportunities to reduce car use
when practical, by walking or biking for short trips, ridesharing,
and combining several errands into one trip.
Our options for getting to work or school, shopping
or recreation, conducting business, and visiting family or friends
depend very much on where we live. Choosing where you live for
its walkability and convenience to work, school, or transit—what planners call
location efficiency—is a key way to reduce your need for driving.
In some areas, people find it surprisingly easy to do without a car
at all.
Commuters may be eligible for benefits from
their employers for transit or carpooling, or can receive cash
by simply walking, biking, or telecommuting. These "Commuter Choice" programs
cut pollution, reduce traffic congestion, and conserve energy.
Ask your employer if they have a Commuter Choice program. If not,
ask them to start one.
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How to buy green
Sorting out Standards
EPA Fuel Economy Estimation (Cars and Light Trucks)
Why Buy Green?
Climate Disruption and Global Warming Pollution
Health Impacts of Car and Truck Pollution
Automobiles and the environment
Glossary |