Scooters are a popular form of transportation in much of the world,
particularly in Asia and southern Europe. It’s not uncommon, for
instance, to see newly minted Russian citizen Gerard Depardieu zipping
around Paris or, say, the French President slipping away from the Élysée to meet up with his mistress.
Read the full article @ Forbes
The trouble with scooters, however, is that the EU does not hold them
to the same emissions standards as cars and other vehicles. As a
result, they are heavy polluters, as shown in new research by European
scientists in the journal Nature Communications. The pollution is
so bad, the authors write, that the European Commission believes “that
scooters will emit more volatile organic compounds (VOCs) than all other
vehicles combined in Europe by 2020.” The following chart demonstrates
why
The chart compares scooter emissions (which were measured by the
researchers) with other vehicles (whose data was obtained from the
literature). The four sectors of the graph represent (a) primary organic
aerosols, (b) primary + secondary organic aerosols, (c) benzene, and
(d) light aromatics. They also compared emissions to environmental
samples taken in Asia, Europe and the United States (also obtained from
the literature).
As shown, two-stroke (2S) scooters emit 100 to 1,000 times more
pollution compared to cars, vans and other light-duty vehicles (LDV), as
well as trucks and other heavy-duty vehicles (HDV). Notably, scooters
emitted about 20 times more pollution than what is found on a
road/tunnel dominated by cars. Benzene emissions are so high that the
authors claim waiting behind one in traffic might actually damage your
health. (Although, that claim would need to be subjected to further
scrutiny.)
It should be noted that, according to the data the authors presented,
air pollution is worse in the U.S. than in Europe. But, if scooters
keep increasing in popularity and the EU does not tighten regulation of
2S scooter emissions, that could change. Perhaps Europeans should
consider upgrading to 4S or zero-emission electric scooters.
Platt SM, et al. “Two-stroke scooters are a dominant source of air pollution in many cities.” Nat Commun 5:3749 (2014). doi: 10.1038/ncomms4749
No comments:
Post a Comment