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The Definitive Guide on Reducing Vehicles Pollution 

ByMatsumoto Naoki-July 14, 2024

Did you know that the particular cars you choose and how you drive them have the most significant impact on the environment among all the vast choices you make as a consumer? 

While you may not care about reducing air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions, opting for a fuel-efficient car can potentially save you hundreds of dollars each year in fuel costs. This annual saving can add up to a sizable amount.

Or if you would like to go green but cannot afford electric or hybrid cars and alternative fuels, which are the most environmentally friendly options, you can change your driving habits right now to reduce emissions and also cut your fuel costs. 

Otherwise, simply choosing a fuel-efficient and low-emission gas-powered car alone means considerable environmental benefits.

There are many things you can do with ease to reduce emissions. (Photo Source: Car Insurance)

Being a responsible driver is both easier and cheaper than you would think. This comprehensive guide will teach you how to change your daily driving habits starting today to burn less fuel, cleaner fuel options and how much emission they can reduce, and how to choose more fuel-efficient and cleaner-emission cars. 

At the end of this guide is a detailed explanation on how to read the updated Fuel Economy and Environment Label on new vehicles for sale, so that you can compare cars in terms of their fuel efficiency and environmental impacts. Start saving money and our planet today!

Learn how to drive green now! No, not literally. (Photo Source: motor1)

How to burn less fuel: The greener ways to drive

There are many things you can do today to start saving on your fuel cost and reduce air pollutants even without switching to a greener car or a greener type of fuel. 

Here’s how to drive less and drive the right way:

Proper maintenance is vital

Keeping your tires inflated properly will ensure better fuel efficiency, since under-inflated tires means more traction, making your car work harder and burn more fuel than normal to get it moving.

Under-inflation means reduced fuel economy and more wear. (Photo Source: pixy)

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In addition, it is needless to say a healthy car with regular and proper maintenance will most likely work as efficiently as it should. A number of problems with your car may cause fuel inefficiency and/or produce more emissions. 

To learn how to service your car in your own garage, refer to our comprehensive library on pro maintenance guides and tips.

Proper maintenance is the first thing you can do to optimize your car’s fuel efficiency. (Photo Source: istockphoto)

What car issues increase emissions?

Many issues can lead to higher emissions of toxic pollutants. For instance, incomplete fuel combustion can increase emissions of carbon monoxide. This issue can be a result of improper ignition timing, a dirty air filter, a fouled spark plug, a broken air pump, a stuck choke, or a faulty computer chip. 

Similarly, increased hydrocarbon emissions can be a result of vacuum leaks, worn piston rings, fouled spark plugs, improper ignition timing or faulty ignition. 

A number of ignition problems can increase emissions. (Photo Source: drive2)

A simply well-maintained car will enjoy the optimal level of fuel economy, thereby minimizing the emissions of carbon monoxide, hydrocarbon and a number of other toxic air pollutants. 

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Drive wise

Since all of us drive daily or almost everyday, even changing small driving habits can contribute to significant reduction in emissions. Start driving less and burn less fuel while driving with these actionable advice. 

  • Go easy on the gas pedal: A gradual and smooth acceleration uses less fuel and is better for your engine.
  • Avoid idling: When your car idles, its exhaust contains more pollutants compared to when it is running.

Cut your speed: Driving slow and steady ensures safety, reduces emissions and saves fuel.

Idling is banned in many cities around the world: you might be fined if caught. (Photo Source: kitsapsun)

Drive less

Spending less time on the road by planning your trips wisely means less stress, more free time, burning less fuel and producing less air pollutants: 

  • Combine errands:
    When your car is warmed up and runs a continuous longer trip, it emits less emissions compared to running many short trips with gaps in between. Thus, plan your trips within a day and try to combine trips where possible: If the library is on the way to your grocery store, combine library return and grocery shopping into one trip.
  • Burn calories:
    With short trips, consider walking, jogging or biking to avoid burning fuel while doing a big favour for your body and health.
  • Ride-sharing:
    Use transit and car-pool with friends instead of driving alone as often as you can.
  • Work from home:
    If your employer allows, working from home occasionally will reduce driving, plus it will give you a good change of air.
  • Work and play closer to home:
    If you happen to be changing jobs and the new employer is very far from your current place, consider moving closer to your workplace to drive less and live better.

Don’t forget emissions not coming from your car 

You might not expect this, but in addition to the emissions coming from your own car, you are also causing emissions in other ways:

Home Deliveries

If every consumer shops online and has their packages delivered to their doors, then worldwide vehicle emissions and air pollution would be significantly reduced.

That is because instead of so many individuals driving around to get their groceries from a particular supermarket chain, that supermarket chain will send out only a few trucks to deliver to as many consumers as possible in a single day, each using the shortest combination of routes possible.

Allow a longer delivery window so the service provider can optimize routes and save fuels. (Photo Source: costar)

When shopping online, it is common for one seller, like Target or Walmart, to send different products in an order from different warehouses or stores. For one like Amazon, which sells offerings from many manufacturers, each manufacturer will send a separate package to your address. 

Instead, now you can usually choose to have all your packages sent in one shipment only and also with minimal packaging. In addition, you can also choose longer delivery windows so delivery trucks can optimize their routes. 

Lawn & Gardening Equipment

Gas-powered lawn and gardening equipment like the lawn mower, although small, can emit significant amounts of pollutants.

Easy tips to minimize emissions from these equipment:

  • Use a manual mower for small lawns.
  • Again, proper and frequent maintenance will save you fuel and time, including regular tuning and changing the oil. 
  • When buying landscaping equipment, look for the later-generation electric and battery-powered  instead of gas-powered equipment. These later machines are both quieter and greener.
  • For commercial-grade equipment, choose among many options with advanced emissions reduction technologies. 
This tiny cultivator is powered by lithium-ion batteries. (Photo Source: youtube)

Burn cleaner fuels

Without switching to another car, you can start driving greener with cleaner fuels. Check with professionals which type of the following fuels is best for your particular car.

1. Low-sulfur gasoline & diesel

Low-sulfur gasoline and diesel reduce pollutants by 10-15% compared to regular gasoline and diesel. 

Sulfur is a natural component in crude oil, and thus will always be present in gasoline and diesel unless removed. Sulfur is bad for your car engine and the environment. 

The sulfur dioxide from your car’s emissions reacts with oxygen and water vapor to become sulfuric acid, which causes acid rain. Even in very small quantities, it can generate particulates or extra fine sooty emissions, which causes or contributes to asthma and cancer. 

Due to sulfur’s harmful impacts on air pollution and our health, low-sulfur gasoline and diesel were introduced along with stricter sulfur standards and limits imposed by many countries and cities.

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2. E85

E85 or 85% ethanol fuel is a blend of 85% ethanol and 15% gasoline. E85 was first invented and introduced during the 1920s, and was in high demand during World War II because of fuel shortages.

Currently, E85 is produced primarily from corn sugar cane or starches, with potential for other plant-based cellulose materials to be used in future mass production of E85.

The cleaner-burning fuel E85 has been gaining popularity for the past 10 years. (Photo Source: kbhradio)

Compared to conventional gasoline, E85 produces cleaner combustion and thus fewer emissions of pollutants. In addition, including the energy required to grow corn or sugar cane and for the production process, E85 generates less greenhouse gas emissions than gasoline by 20%-25%. 

E85 is typically used in “flexible fuel” or “flex-fuel” vehicles. The good news is a growing number of cars on the road today are also capable of burning this cleaner fuel. 

3. Natural gas 

Cars run on natural gas emits 25% less greenhouse gases than those run on regular gas or diesel. Not only that, natural gas is also cheaper, costing  $1.50 to $2 less per gasoline-gallon equivalent.

You can convert your current gas-powered car so that it can run only on natural gas convert it to a bi-fuel vehicle, that is it can run on either gasoline or natural gas. The great news is, like with E85, car manufacturers are making an increasing number of bi-fuel vehicles or cars that only run on natural gas.

A natural gas station. (Photo Source: cars)

4. Biodiesel 

Biodiesel reduces air pollutants by 20% compared with low-sulfur diesel, which in turn already produces less emissions than traditional diesel by 10-15%.

Unlike natural gas which requires conversion, biodiesel can be used in your existing car without any changes to your engine, a characteristic that offers considerable convenience. 

While regular diesel fuel is made from petroleum, biodiesel is manufactured from a variety of vegetable oils, animal fats, and even recycled restaurant grease.

Rapeseed is a common input for biodiesel production. (Photo Source: medium)

Biodiesel works in the same way as petroleum-based diesel. You can use only biodiesel or blend it with petroleum-based diesel in any proportion.

Biodiesel typically sells for 20 cents to 80 cents more per gallon compared to traditional diesel. However, we can be hopeful that its price will lower in the near future thanks to advanced technology.

Choosing the right car

If you’re planning to go green in the long term, consider switching to a car that is more fuel-efficient, that is it can run longer distances on less fuel, and/or emits cleaner emissions.

Buy fuel-efficient cars

Fuel efficiency is measured by the distance a vehicle can travel by burning one gallon of gas and expressed in miles per gallon (MPG). 

Every car has an MPG rating, along with other fuel-efficiency measures. A rule of thumb is to shop for a car rated at at least 32 MPG. 

Opt for a car with fuel efficiency of 32 MPG and above. (Photo Source: imgur)

Over the years, vehicle testing has been greatly improved to better reflect real-world driving and as a result, the MPG rating is much more accurate and reliable now.

Buy cleaner-emission cars

Countries may have different federal emissions standards. In the United States, such standards are set by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). 

Look for the fuel economy label under each car’s hood to check if it’s classified as a low-emission or ultra-low-emission vehicle. For details on how to read the different measurements on this label, scroll down to the end of this guide.

Least green vehicles

With the advancement in automotive manufacturing, the later generation of cars are much more fuel efficient and produce less toxic emissions compared to older models. If you love a particular vintage design, consider having it fixed up so that you have the best of both worlds: a classy design and a greener engine. 

Old cars typically have lower fuel economy and more polluting emissions. (Photo Source: autoyas)

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A quick note on diesel-powered cars: they are on average more fuel efficient than gas-powered counterparts, however, their exhausts are more polluting. Solution: go for the later generation of cleaner diesels.

Most green vehicles

1. Electric & hybrid vehicles

While electric vehicles produce no emissions, a hybrid is already considerably a greener alternative. A hybrid combines a gas or diesel engine with an electric motor, thus burns less fuel.

To encourage the use of hybrid vehicles, many governments grant lower taxes to hybrid car owners, such as first year road tax and company car tax.

Electric and hybrid cars have seen increased production, more advanced technology and promotion from governments. (Photo Source: wallpapercave)

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There are 3 types of hybrid vehicles:

Parallel hybrids: 

The car runs by the engine alone, or the electric motor alone, or by both at the same time. This is the most common type you will find on the road, with the Toyota Prius being the most popular.

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Toyota Prius is currently the most popular parallel hybrids. (Photo Source: japanbullet)

Range extender hybrids:

The engine never directly powers the car but only produces energy for the electric motor to operate. In other words, the engine generates enough electricity for the generator to charge the batteries. 

The BMW i3 and Honda Jazz are popular choices in this category.

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Honda Jazz is a reliable and affordable choice for range extender hybrids. (Photo Source: pholder)

Plug-in hybrids:

Being right in the middle between the common parallel hybrids and full electric vehicles, these hybrids can be plugged in at power outlets to recharge their batteries.

Compared to the other 2 types of hybrid, plug-in hybrids have larger battery banks and can run longer distances on electricity alone.

Plug-in hybrids offer the highest level of environmental benefits. (Photo Source: bmwgroup)

You can choose from a larger variety of plug-in hybrids nowadays, with the top rated ones being Toyota Prius, Mitsubishi Outlander and Volvo V60.

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2. Flex-fuel vehicles

Flexible fuel or flex-fuel vehicles (FFVs), also called dual-fuel vehicles, run on 100% E85 or 100% gasoline or any combination of the two. They are increasingly popular these days, with almost 20 millions such vehicles in the United States alone.

The cap on a flex fuel vehicle indicates it can run on any combination of E85 and gasoline. (Photo Source: diply)

Began with the 1994 Ford Taurus, the list of flex-fuel vehicles today is vast and includes many brands and models to choose from. 

Some of the most favoured models include Toyota Sequoia, Jeep Renegade, Ford Escape, Nissan Frontier, Chevy Impala and Chrysler 300. One of the best selling luxury SUVs on the current market, Mercedes GLE350, is also flex-fuel.

Nissan Frontier, a mid-size truck with plenty of towing capacity for your mobile home. (Photo Source: keralapool)

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3. Hydrogen fuel cell vehicles

Hydrogen fuel cell vehicles run on compressed hydrogen fed into a group of individual fuel cells, which produces electricity in a rather similar way as a combustion engine. They therefore have no emissions. 

How hydrogen fuel cell vehicles work. (Photo Source: wisaias)

Interestingly, a fuel cell can be combined with an electric motor to create zero-emission dual vehicles. 

Unfortunately, at the moment, hydrogen fuel is much more expensive than gasoline. It typically sells for around $14 per kg, which is equivalent to $5.60 per gallon of gasoline and translates to some $0.21 per mile. In addition, fueling stations are highly limited.

The hydrogen tank in 2019 Toyota Mirai, one of the latest introduction in the hydrogen fuel cell vehicles market. (Photo Source: autoyas)

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A hydrogen fuel cell, which typically has a life expectancy of 5,000 to 10,000 hours. (Photo Source: scoop)

How to buy fuel efficient vehicles: Reading the labels

In 2012, the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) implemented dramatic improvements to the Fuel Economy and Environment Label on new vehicles for sale. 

Now car buyers can make car by car comparisons with much ease with regards to a number of metrics, including fuel economy, annual fuel costs, smog and greenhouse gas ratings, and other environmental measures.

Below are three examples for labels on gas-powered cars, electric cars and plug-in hybrids, and what each metric means.

Gasoline Vehicle Label

(Photo Source: epa)

Electric Vehicle Label

(Photo Source: epa)

Plug-In Hybrids Label

(Photo Source: epa)

What the Label tells you

#1. The type of vehicle

#2. Fuel Economy

  • Gas-powered vehicles: Expressed in miles per gallon (MPG). Look for 32 MPG and above.
  • Hybrids: Fuel efficiency is shown for both modes of operation: on electricity and on gasoline. 
  • Electric vehicles: Fuel efficiency is expressed in miles per gallon equivalent (MPGe). MPGe can be used to compare all vehicle technologies and fuels.

#3. Comparing Fuel Economy to Other Vehicles

Look here to know the minimum and maximum ratings for fuel efficiency, and compare a particular vehicle to others in the same category.

#4. You Save

This is the estimated potential saving in fuel cost this vehicle will bring over five years relative to another average vehicle, based on the assumptions detailed at the bottom of the label.

#5. Fuel Consumption Rate

Unlike MPG, the fuel consumption rate directly expresses the amount of fuel consumed, and thus fuel cost.

  • Gas-powered cars:  gallons per 100 miles.
  • Electric cars: kilowatt-hours per 100 miles. 

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#6.  Estimated Annual Fuel Cost

This estimate is based on two assumptions: an annual mileage of 15,000 miles and a forecasted fuel price.  The inputs for forecasted fuel prices is provided in #10. Details in Fine Print.

Find out how much you can save per year in fuel cost. (Photo Source: fuelfreedom)

#7. Fuel Economy and Greenhouse Gas Rating

Each vehicle is rated from 1 (worst) to 10 (best) for fuel economy and carbon dioxide emissions per mile. Higher fuel economy usually means a better rating for carbon dioxide emissions.

Gas-powered vehicles will have only one rating as the amount of fuel consumed directly affects carbon dioxide emissions. 

#8. CO2 Emissions Information

This section of the label includes three pieces of data:

  • Combined city/highway CO2 tailpipe emissions
    Displayed in grams per mile, a car’s CO2 tailpipe emissions come from actual testing. 
  • Vehicle with lowest CO2 emissions
    The lowest tailpipe CO2 emissions of available vehicles currently on the market.
  • Greenhouse Gas Rating
    Each new vehicle receives a GHG rating from 1 (worst) to 10 (best), based on tailpipe tailpipe carbon dioxide emissions only, not including any emissions from fuel production.

#9. Smog Rating

On a scale from 1 (worst) to 10 (best), this rating concerns those pollutants that cause smog, including nitrogen oxide, non-methane organic gas, carbon monoxide, particulate matter, and formaldehyde. 

Electricity cars: smog rating is always zero.

#10.  Details in Fine Print

This section clarifies the inputs for forecasted fuel prices for estimating annual fuel cost in 5 years: a fixed annual mileage of 15,000 miles plus fuel price forecasts from the U.S. Energy Information Administration for the year of the model, updated annually. 

#11. QR Code®

Scan the QR Code® 1 on the label using your smartphone to get access to additional information about the car you’re eyeing. 

#13. Driving Range

For electric vehicles and hybrids, this value estimates the number of miles that each charge allows.

#14. Charge Time

This shows how long it takes for an electric vehicle or a hybrid to charge a fully empty battery with 240 volt electrical service. 

For comparisons, all such vehicles will display a charge time when using 240 volt service. Do note that using voltage lower than 240 means longer charging times.

Matsumoto Naoki is senior car blogger at Car From Japan. Having background in mechanical engineering, he has a unique perspective on a lot of new car innovations. Prior to Car From Japan, Matsumoto was Mechanical Design Engineer at Yajima Plant, Subaru Corporation. His articles provide detailed DIY instructions and how-tos to help you get your new car on the road. If you want to save money and feel more confident when working on your cars, you should not ignore Matsumoto’s sharing posts. He presents driving tips and tricks for everyone through easy-following steps and mechanically but friendly writing.

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