Wednesday, April 3, 2013

The Evils of Being Idle


The Evils of Being Idle
By Karen Digby, member of the St. Francis Sustainability Team
found on page 10 of
 Forum bulletin April 7th, 2013.

    The dictionary defines the word idle as something “not in use or operation”, “not working or active”. The book of Proverbs 18:9 states, “Whoever is slack in his work is a brother to him who destroys.”  Together, both this definition and quotation perfectly describe the effects that the idling of a car has on the atmosphere.  Did you know that idling your car, even for a few minutes, is destructive to your environment, the­­ very air you breathe, and ultimately to your health?  Idling is a costly and wasteful habit too.  It has been determined that more gas is lost in the idling of a car (approximately two-tenths of a gallon per half hour) than in restarting its engine. Over 27 gallons of gas are lost annually, by idling a car, for as little as even ten minutes each day.  Additionally, the wear on the engine with each restart costs approximately $10 annually, while wear from an idling engine can cost hundreds of dollars each year, due to the damage it causes to exhaust systems, spark plugs, cylinders and other parts of the car’s engine.  Although a car can ultimately be replaced, your health and atmosphere cannot. 

     The engines of cars are created to work more effectively to combust fuel at high temperatures.  However, when idle, the car engine works at a low temperature.  This causes fuel entering the car’s catalytic converter to undergo incomplete combustion, thereby, permitting the emission of harmful complex chemical components such a nitrogen oxide, benzene, sulfur dioxide and carbon monoxide, to name a few, into the air.  When people breathe this toxic air, they suffer damaging effects to their bodies (cancer), particularly the lungs (asthma), heart and blood vessels (high blood pressure and decreased oxygen flow to heart and other tissue).  This is particularly troubling for children who breathe in more air per pound of their body weight, as compared to adults.

     So what can you do to prevent your car from being “idle”?  First and foremost, if your car will remain still (while the engine is on) for more than half a minute, turn off your engine.  Worried about a cold car when temperatures are colder?  No worries.  Cars with electronic engines are engineered to warm even more quickly when a car is being driven, compared to when it is standing still, especially if  increased speed and quick acceleration is avoided during the first three to five miles in which the car is first driven.  If waiting to pick up a passenger, use a blanket to stay warm or get out of the car and go indoors to wait.  Waiting in a running car can increase the risk of you yourself breathing in toxic fumes that can leak into your car’s interior.  As an added bonus, for every ten minutes the car engine is not idle, ten pounds of carbon dioxide will be prevented from polluting the air.

     Prevent being “slack in [your] work” to preserve your environment, fossil fuel resources, and money.  Do not let yourself become the “brother to him (fuel/carbon emissions) who destroys” the health of you and your children. You will reap what you sow both now and for generations to come.

http://www.nutramed.com/environment/carschemicals.htm

Join your fellow parishioners as we build a Sustainability Project here at St. Francis.   

Contact Scott Wright (734-821-2121).

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