A typical washing machine can produce around 0.5 kg of CO2 per cycle due to electricity consumption for operation and water heating. However, this value can vary depending on the energy efficiency of the machine and the source of electricity used.
The amount of CO2 produced by a 10 Megawatt power station would depend on the type of fuel it uses. For example, a coal-fired power station would produce around 25,000 tons of CO2 per year, while a natural gas power station would produce around 15,000 tons of CO2 per year.
No, nuclear power stations do not produce carbon dioxide (CO2) during the electricity generation process. Nuclear power generates electricity by splitting atoms in a process called nuclear fission, which does not involve the combustion of fossil fuels that produce CO2 emissions.
none directly, as it involves no combustion. however the infrastructure supporting it can (e.g. mining equipment, ore processing and refining, enrichment plants, fuel pellet factories). the exact amount would be hard to estimate.
On average, a person produces around 20 metric tons (44,000 pounds) of CO2 per year through activities such as transportation, energy use, and food production.
A 50-pound steel CO2 tank typically weighs around 30 pounds when empty.
secret
9200000
Because dry seeds have a very low metabolic rate and do not produce much Co2. Germinating seeds produce more Co2.
no, not at all. albeit amount of released oxygen can reach lower or even lowest but can't produce CO2.
30 tons of bullcrap
not really sure HA you were hoping to get a proper answer!
On average 258.63g of Carbon Dioxide a day
273 g/km
Mulch itself does not produce CO2. Instead, when organic mulch decomposes, it releases small amounts of CO2 as a byproduct of the natural decomposition process. The amount of CO2 released will depend on factors such as the type of mulch, its thickness, and environmental conditions.
Animals produce co2 and plants produce o2 and co2
Carbon dioxide (CO2): We produce too much CO2 by burning fossil fuels (coal to make electricity, and oil for heating and transport.Methane (CH4): We produce too much CH4 by raising cattle. Cattle belching and manure release the gas, twenty-one times more powerful than CO2.
A tiny miniscule of fuel plus a lot of rice