Nearly everything about how Americans "care" for their lawns is deadly, but these machines exist in a category of environmental hell all their own.
...the gasoline-powered leaf blower exists in a category of environmental hell all its own, spewing pollutants — carbon monoxide, smog-forming nitrous oxides, carcinogenic hydrocarbons — into the atmosphere at a literally breathtaking rate.
This particular environmental catastrophe is not news. A 2011 study by Edmunds found that a two-stroke gasoline-powered leaf blower spewed out more pollution than a 6,200-pound Ford F-150 SVT Raptor pickup truck. Jason Kavanagh, the engineering editor at Edmunds at the time, noted that "hydrocarbon emissions from a half-hour of yard work with the two-stroke leaf blower are about the same as a 3,900-mile drive from Texas to Alaska in a Raptor."
Margaret Renkl (continues)
...the gasoline-powered leaf blower exists in a category of environmental hell all its own, spewing pollutants — carbon monoxide, smog-forming nitrous oxides, carcinogenic hydrocarbons — into the atmosphere at a literally breathtaking rate.
This particular environmental catastrophe is not news. A 2011 study by Edmunds found that a two-stroke gasoline-powered leaf blower spewed out more pollution than a 6,200-pound Ford F-150 SVT Raptor pickup truck. Jason Kavanagh, the engineering editor at Edmunds at the time, noted that "hydrocarbon emissions from a half-hour of yard work with the two-stroke leaf blower are about the same as a 3,900-mile drive from Texas to Alaska in a Raptor."
Margaret Renkl (continues)
Interesting comment from Vincent in Happiness:
ReplyDeleteReminder that Lawns are a hold-over of English Feudalism. At a time when the masses owned nothing but the clothes on their back, and had to work on the land of the Lord in order to eat scraps, English Lords maintained pristine plots of useless land in order to demonstrate their opulence. Only a Lord could own a large "lawn," because only they had large swathes of land, and only they had an abundance of serf manual labor to maintain it. Nowadays, Americans and many other groups try and maintain their own little feudal bragging plot, demonstrating that they are not a "serf" but a "Lord." The richer one is, the larger the lawn. A sign of wealth in modern day America is hiring a lawn-maintenance worker.