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Diesel Disaster - DW [Germany] Documentary

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Published on Jan 29, 2019

Diesel cars were long praised as being eco-friendly, now they are considered to be highly polluting. Strict EU limits on NO2 levels could lead to Diesel cars being banned. How dangerous are Diesel emissions really? Hundreds of thousands of people in German cities like Stuttgart and Cologne face the prospect of being unable to drive to work because of bans on most types of diesel cars in downtown areas. Environmental Action Germany says diesel emissions cause the premature deaths of 13.000 people each year in Germany. Yet the case is not as clear-cut as it might seem. Environmental Action Germany (DUH) is behind the wave of diesel driving bans facing German cities. The NGO has taken authorities here to court for exceeding legal levels of nitrogen dioxide emissions. These are much lower in the European Union than they are in the United States, for example. While 100 micrograms of NO2 per cubic meter are permitted in the US, EU rules stipulate that levels should not exceed 40 micrograms. But the relation between road traffic levels and emission levels is not straightforward. Recently, Oldenburg recorded record levels of nitrogen dioxide pollution on a day when the northern city’s downtown was closed to cars and trucks. Experts are also at loggerheads. While environmentalists cite World Health Organization studies, lung specialists like Stuttgart-based hospital consultant Dr. Martin Hetzel have called the diesel debate “pure panic-mongering”. The former head of the German Respiratory Society (DGP), Dr. Dieter Köhler, agrees. He says cigarette smoke and smoke from candles are much more harmful. And the case of Hamburg also shows that driving bans are no quick fix. Two months after the introduction of the diesel ban, NO2 levels in the northern German city had increased rather than dropped. Twelve million German drivers of diesel vehicles are feeling the pinch. The cars being advertised as green just a few years ago are now worth practically nothing.
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For more documentaries visit: http://www.dw.com/en/tv/docfilm/s-3610

 
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Reactions: lklundin
They interview one doctor who gives he's opinion, it's pure argument from authority. Actual knowledge is found in scientific literature, which currently says:

"Nitrogen dioxide is an irritant of the mucous membrane linked with another air pollutant that causes pulmonary diseases such as OLD, asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and sometimes acute exacerbation of COPD and in fatal cases, deaths."

"Long-term exposures to diesel particulate matter can lead to chronic, more serious health problems such as cardiovascular disease, cardiopulmonary disease, and lung cancer"

Doctor saying that there is no NO2 -disease is like saying there is no tobacco -disease...
 
Particle pollution - shouldn't underestimate the problems of particle pollution.

Particulates contains microscopic solids or liquid droplets that can be inhaled. Some particles less than 10 micrometers in diameter can get deep into your lungs and some may even get into your bloodstream.

Of these, particles less than 2.5 micrometers in diameter, pose the greatest risk to health.

Fine particles are also the main cause of reduced visibility (haze).

obviously google search will yield much more details.
 
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The perfect storm engulfing the world’s top car manufacturers

Auto manufacturers are facing diesel and EV backlash.
Car makers are facing a perfect storm of trade tariffs, slumping demand in the crucial Chinese market, and a backlash against diesel, which are together having a seismic effect on businesses.

A shift toward electric and autonomous vehicles has not helped. They require vast investment and a different way of thinking, which means the corporate grins have been replaced with a collective grimace.
 
  • Informative
Reactions: Brando