9U SOSE - Car Pollution - Dayalan and Kassem
Automobiles are one of the leading causes of air pollution in the world:
Drive time, peak hour, freeway, take-away delivery, drive through....The introduction of the motor vechile's has had a huge impact on our lifestyle and environment.
Cars are able to get us from one point to another, with little fuss, but they also cause lots of pollution.
motor vehicles cause a large ammount of air pollution problems,In major cities and large towns throughout the world.
Cars are responsible for 50% of the worlds Carbon Monoxide pollution which can cause smog and may be poisonous in high concentrations
Cars are responsible for 35% of the worlds Oxides of Nitrogen and Volatile organic compound pollution which can damage your respiratory system and injures plants
Cars are also responsible for 35% of the worlds Carbon dioxide pollution which is the primary contributor to global warming!

Cars are also responsible for water pollution
Leaks, runoff off road particles and improperly disposed of waste products such as motor oil can severely affect water pollution

There are over 750 million motor vehicles in the world today and if we keep going like this, the number of cars on Earth will double in the next 30 years

A video about car pollution:


Cars can have a massive toll on the environment however we can reduce are carbon footprint one person at a time this by driving less.
car pollution is composed of the fall-out that comes out of the exhaust systems or other emissions such as gasoline . vaporization, These emissions contribute to air pollution and are a major element in the making of smog in some large cities.
Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas. car CO2 emissions are part of the anthropogenic addition to the advancement of CO2 focusings in the atmosphere. cars are calculated to generate about 20 per-cent of the European Union's man-made CO2 emissions, with passenger cars contributing about 12 per-cent.The European Union average new car CO2 emissions number dropped by 5.4 per-cent in the year to the first quarter of 2010, down to 145.6 g/km.