No.
The halogens are fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, and astatine.
All fossil fuels are part of the carbon cycle.
Fossil fuels are made up of compounds called hydrocarbons. Fossil fuels are fuels that come from natural resources, such as dead organisms.
The fossil fuels, all of which are non-renewable, are petroleum, coal, and natural gas.
The burning of fossil fuels has detrimental effects on human health and the environment. Smog, pollution, and dirty fuel are all lasting attributes of burning fossil fuels.
When fossil fuels are burned, they all produce and release smoke/smog (or CO2) in the air. So yes, they all affect the environment the same.
Halogens are not the basis of all fossil fuels. Carbon is the basis of fossil fuels and it is not a halogen.
No Solar and wind power are both not fossil fuels.
No.
no electricity is made from fossil fuels.
All fossil fuels are part of the carbon cycle.
Gasoline and ordinary diesel fuel are both fossil fuels, so almost all cars run only on fossil fuels.
All fuels by definition are used to produce energy, fossil fuels are no exception. (Shorter answer: Yes.)
There isn't any fossill fuels that don't cause pollution. All fossil fuels cause pollution.
Fossil fuels are made up of compounds called hydrocarbons. Fossil fuels are fuels that come from natural resources, such as dead organisms.
The fossil fuels, all of which are non-renewable, are petroleum, coal, and natural gas.
All cars use fossil fuels somewhere in their energy cycle.
Australia primarily relies on coal, natural gas, and oil as its main fossil fuels. Coal is the most abundant and heavily used fossil fuel in the country, followed by natural gas and oil. These fossil fuels are used for electricity generation, transportation, and industrial processes in Australia.