Originally posted by Brian Ellis
Sorry, you miss the point, entirely. First, nearly all western countries have mandatory emission controls, even this little one and the small cars pass just as easily as the large ones. However, the important point is not CO, HC, NOx or SOx emissions which are controlled but CO2 emissions. And there, they are proportional to the fuel that is burnt. So, if you need 10 l of fuel to go from A to B in a small car, you will produce half the greenhouse-gas pollution than if your large car needs 20 l for the same journey. This is what is important. Even the US Administration has recently reluctantly admitted that climate change is for real, after reneging on the Kyoto Protocol three years ago. Ask anyone in Florida.
Sorry, you miss the point, entirely. First, nearly all western countries have mandatory emission controls, even this little one and the small cars pass just as easily as the large ones. However, the important point is not CO, HC, NOx or SOx emissions which are controlled but CO2 emissions. And there, they are proportional to the fuel that is burnt. So, if you need 10 l of fuel to go from A to B in a small car, you will produce half the greenhouse-gas pollution than if your large car needs 20 l for the same journey. This is what is important. Even the US Administration has recently reluctantly admitted that climate change is for real, after reneging on the Kyoto Protocol three years ago. Ask anyone in Florida.
my little 5L car will average about 10-11L/100km on the highway.
it scored well into the bottom 1/4 of the allowed limits for emissions.
it turns at 2000 rpm at 110km/hr.
now lets say we have a 2L Honda, that turns at about 4500rpm at the same speed and averages 6-7L/100 km, and just barely passes emissions.
Which one is producing more pollution??
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