Release Date: October 16, 2002
Road Safety Fact Sheet
RS-2002-03
TP 2436 E
Motor vehicle exhaust gas contains carbon monoxide, which is a colourless, odourless gas that is produced by the burning of carbon-based materials such as coal, wood, paper, oil, gasoline, and cigarettes. When inhaled in sufficient quantities, carbon monoxide can cause symptoms that include sensitivity to light, headache, nausea, dizziness, and general disorientation. Visual perception and manual dexterity may also be affected, which can impair driving performance.
In 1971, the Government of Canada imposed limits on exhaust gas emissions at the tailpipe. The initial permissible limit for carbon monoxide was 24.1 g/km, which was lowered in 1975 and then again in 1987 to 2.1 g/km, where it remains today. As a result of emissions controls, motor vehicles were equipped with catalytic converters, which convert carbon monoxide to carbon dioxide, a harmless gas.
Although the reason for imposing emissions controls was to protect the environment, an unanticipated benefit has been a steady reduction in the number of deaths from accidental exhaust gas poisoning each year. From a high point of 162 deaths in 1973, accidental poisonings declined to 20 fatalities in 1999, the most recent year for which statistics are available. In the late 1990s, more stringent limits on pollutants other than carbon monoxide had the added benefit of further reducing the concentration of carbon monoxide in exhaust gas. Even stricter limits on these pollutants, which will come into full force in 2004, will reduce carbon monoxide emissions once again.
While the Government of Canada is pleased with this impressive reduction in the occurrence of accidental exhaust gas poisoning, it believes that, if everyone took the following simple precautions, deaths from unintentional poisoning could be eliminated altogether:
Related Facts:
If you would like additional information, please contact our Information Centre at 1-800-333-0371, send us an e-mail at RoadSafetyWebMail@tc.gc.ca, or write to us at:
Road Safety and Motor Vehicle
Regulation Directorate
Transport Canada
Tower C, Place de Ville
330 Sparks Street
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0N5