How
Do Hybrid Cars Perform
In Emission Standards?
by SolveYourProblem.com
A
close look at the EPA’s (Environmental Protection Agency) will
make most people wonder why we have all not been forced to
purchase hybrid cars. The mileage performance of the Honda
Insight, which gets into the high sixties at times, should
be enough incentive to get one to purchase it, without even
looking at the EPA ratings. The truth is that the more gas
one uses, the more emissions and air pollution you put into
the air. The way to counteract the hazardous effects of gas
guzzling vehicles is of course, the combination of electric
and gas power. The performance of hybrids in the environmental
department is not just cutting pollution by a few percentages. Some hybrids, like the Toyota Prius, are cutting numbers by
a staggering 90%. It seems that the combination of electric
with gas power, has not been totally perfected, but it is taking
emissions standards to an unthought-of level.
Hybrids
are showing what regular gas cars really are because they
so vastly bypass them in emissions ratings. One-third
of the world’s pollution is directly caused by cars. The burning
of fuel in regular cars actually puts tons of toxic chemicals
into the air. The worst of these chemicals is carbon dioxide.
This is the gas which is being linked to possible global warming.
Driving a Toyota Prius cuts the tons of carbon dioxide being
released into the air by half. Another chemical which some
studies show contributes to global warming is nitrogen oxide.
This has also been known to cause lung irritation and acid
rain. Driving a hybrid has been known to cut emissions
of nitrogen oxide by more than half. Hydrocarbons affect the human body
to catastrophic results. Birth defects and cancer have been
linked to the release of hydrocarbons into the air. Honda’s
hybrids have cut emissions of hydrocarbons by more than two-thirds.
There is also lead, particulate matter and carbon monoxide
being released into the air every time we drive in our car.
Sitting in traffic during rush-hour or at the drive-through
lets one sit in a stew of toxic chemicals. All of these
chemicals, gases and particles are being cut in half, or by
triple, with
the purchase of a hybrid car. Because more and more people
are becoming interested in what the EPA has to say about global
warming, harmful effects on the human body, and general pollution
by regular cars, makers are coming out with better and better
hybrid cars. Each year, makers like Toyota, Honda, Ford and
soon GM, Saturn and Mazda, are improving the gas mileage performance
of the hybrid models which directly affect how much emissions
will get into the air and produce fatal results.
The EPA and other environmentally minded groups are supporting
the production of hybrids simply by getting the results of
their studies to consumers. Special ratings are being given
to hybrid vehicles. For example, a ULEV rating indicates ultra-low-emissions-vehicle
and SLEV is a super-low-emissions-vehicle. All of the
hybrids are receiving these ultra or super-low emissions ratings
from
the EPA, while their non-hybrid counterparts are still receiving
below average ratings for air pollution emissions.
The EPA breaks down the scoring for vehicles and gives them
a separate rating for air pollution, and one for greenhouse
gases. Even though emissions standards released in the 1970s
made it mandatory for vehicles to maintain certain standards,
which helped reduce some of the pollution and greenhouse gases,
makers are usually not able to even get above average ratings
in both categories for most models. Hybrids hold the
key to excellent ratings. Terrain, weather and speed all affect the
data which goes into calculating the ratings for hybrids, and
all other cars, but all considered; hybrids are still surpassing
the EPA’s expectations. They are all scoring above average,
even perfect scores in some cases, because they are able to
use electric power. The hybrid is still using plenty of gas.
It just combines this with electric power when it can. This
keeps the hybrid from having to use as much gas. This reduced
use of gas is what is making the hybrid the bright star of
the EPA standards and is pleasing fuel conscience people around
the world.
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SolveYourProblem.com : 2007
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