| Hole in the ozone layer |
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I've heard that AC is responsible for the hole in the ozone layer
Whilst not true there is an element of truth in this story. Up to about fifteen years ago only luxury cars had AC in Britain, some Mercedes, BMW's, Jaguars, and the top models of the popular makes, such as the Ford Granada/Scorpio and the Vauxhall Senators. Rolls Royce had a nice system and cars that would otherwise be extremely hot and uncomfortable such as Ferrari, Lamborghini and Porsche had to have AC. Not only cars of course, over twenty years ago on the top-of-the-range Volvo lorries AC was not even an option – it was standard fitment. Many farm tractors and most combine-harvesters were also so fitted. They used a system much the same as today but the difference was they used a refrigerant popularly known as Freon. This is a trade name but is properly called R12 and it is this refrigerant, which is a CFC, and the mis-use of it by the AC technicians of the day that is partly responsible for the problems in the ionosphere. This refrigerant was not only used in AC of course, every domestic refrigerator and freezer all over the world was filled with R12 as was every shop frig or freezer and also the walk-in chillers that butchers have and the huge coldstores that farmers use and the vast freezer warehouses that the processors and the supermarkets use. Food safety legislation over recent decades has forced the use of refrigeration into many areas of shops where they previously used just the display counters, one has only to notice the large number of chill cabinets in shops for cakes and sandwiches and cheese and milk and drinks and - the list is endless. Additionally there is now a large number of refrigerated lorries on the road where chilled or frozen food must by law be kept to set temperatures during delivery: take a look when you are next driving on a motorway and first look at the number of Tesco/Asda/Morrison/Sainsbury/etc lorries you see - almost every one is a reefer (refrig), then look at the number of similar artics used by the supplier companies, I'm sure you will be amazed at the extent of refrigeration in transport. Almost every application where refrigeration was needed you would find R12 or another similar refrigerant of the same family of CFC's, the use of it world-wide was huge. Every fridge we the general public scrapped would have been broken up by the rag-and-bone man to recover the steel and copper and the R12 allowed to escape.
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