[Robert Howarth, professor of ecology and environmental biology at Cornell University] is basing his conclusion on a preliminary analysis that includes not only the amount of carbon dioxide that comes
out of a tailpipe when you burn diesel and natural gas, but also the impact of natural gas leaks.
Not exact matches
When we drive our car and carbon dioxide comes
out of the
tailpipe, within a year it has spread throughout the atmosphere and is integrated with the surface ocean.
When existing corn is used for ethanol, what comes
out of the
tailpipe doesn't change and what is taken
out of the atmosphere doesn't change either because the corn would be grown anyway.
«Ozone develops in the atmosphere from gases that come
out of tailpipes, smokestacks and many other sources,» reports ALA. «
When these gases come in contact with sunlight, they react and form ozone smog.»
It's a little bit like
when Pontiac said it was reviving the GTO and delivered a Holden Monaro with
tailpipes coming
out of only one side
of the rear bumper.