To: Electronic Telegraph <et.letters@telegraph.co.uk>
Re: The motorcar's "insignificant 0.5%" contribution to greenhouse gases
Date: Mon, 5 Feb 2001 
Published version  Response from John Read  
 
Dear Sir/Madam,

It seems to me that the Telegraph owes Mr Read and other readers an apology and explanation for misleading them about the contribution of motor vehicle exhaust to greenhouse gases by claiming that they contribute an "insignificant 0.5 percent" to total greenhouse gas emissions ("Drive on" in today's Feedback section).

According to official energy information statistics from the U.S. Government (Energy Information Administration, www.eia.doe.gov), total U.S. greenhouse gas emissions for 1999 were 1,832.6 million metric tonnes (carbon equivalent), 16% of which were from "gasoline" burned in motor vehicles. 

Thus, Americans, who it is important to remember represent just 5 percent of the world's population, are pumping out almost 300 million tonnes of carbon a year into the atmosphere from their cars and trucks.

By the time the rest of the world has caught up, the total will be about 6 billion tonnes a year, which, even if technology enables us to halve that figure, is still anything but insignificant.

By encouraging our love affair with the motorcar with such misinformation the Telegraph is doing us a terrible disservice. No one wants to be cursed by their own children or grandchildren - as one day we surely shall be if we continue to allow ourselves to be infatuated by the motorcar.