Fossil fuel is a exhaustive resource. It also harms the ozone.
Fuels release greenhouse gases. These gases can cause ozone depletion.
None. How much fuel is burned will have a minor effect.
Refrigeration (Production of CFCs). Home hair care (Production of CFCs). Powered flight (Release of water vapor at high altitude, and consumption of oxygen at high altitude). Fossil fuel power (Release of hot water vapor to the atmosphere, reduction in free oxygen).
A fossil fuel
Rocket fuel contain greenhouse gases which cause ozone depletion. Minimizing them will do benefit.
See "How does burning fossil fuels deplete the ozone layer?" in the "Related questions" section below.
No it is not. Ozone is not a fossil.
it makes holes in the ozone layer which in the long run makes the sun hotter. hence "globle warming"
solution for ozne layer? to stop the ozone we must not burn fuel and plastics
fossil fuel when burned goes into the atmosphere and then it is gradually making the world get hotter and hotter that is how climate changes are happening (global warming)they give off harmfull gases and they burn the ozone layer which is protecting us from to much heat of the sun and also so we can breath. the ozone layer keeps in the oxygen aswell
Irons for ironing clothes will cause more fossil fuel to be burned, which will heat the troposphere. Ozone absorbs UV-B, which heats the ozone layer. Its effect on the Earth surface temperature (in terms of heating) is very small.
Fuels release greenhouse gases. These gases can cause ozone depletion.
Various parts doesn't hurt ozone. Ammonia is one of them.
Greenhouse gases: Burning fossil fuels releases carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, leading to global warming. Air pollution: Fossil fuel combustion produces pollutants like sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides, which contribute to smog, acid rain, and respiratory issues. Ozone depletion: Some fossil fuels release chemicals that deplete the ozone layer, increasing UV radiation reaching the Earth's surface.
No, burning fossil fuel has little to do with this. The ozone problem was caused by the addition of CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons) to the atmosphere during the 20th century. The Montreal protocol successfully convinced all countries to stop producing CFCs and the ozone layer should have repaired itself by around 2050.
None. How much fuel is burned will have a minor effect.
Refrigeration (Production of CFCs). Home hair care (Production of CFCs). Powered flight (Release of water vapor at high altitude, and consumption of oxygen at high altitude). Fossil fuel power (Release of hot water vapor to the atmosphere, reduction in free oxygen).