William
Kovarik |
Fuels and Society B: 5. Worldwide Usage of TEL |
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4. TEL Toxicity 6. Corporate, Government Decisions, 1920-50 Back to Start
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The success of Ethyl gasoline in the 1930s in the U.S. involved several factors. It was heavily advertised and it gave an obvious improvement in engine knocking. But it was also a way for refiners to deny market access to anyone in the oil business who did not comply with Standard Oils version of business ethics. Ethyl lost an anti-trust lawsuit in 1940, but not before it had cornered 90 percent of US gasoline market. Ethyl also persued sales in Europe with the help of letters from the Surgeon General explaining that its studies had found TEL to be perfectly safe. At its peak in the 1970s, tetraethyl lead was used in about 80 to 90 percent of all gasoline worldwide. By 1970, GM indicated it planned to meet new clean air egulations by installing a catalytic converter in the engine exhaust stream. One of the necessities of this plan was that lead would have to be removed from the gasoline - not because of its toxic effects on the human population but because lead compounds in the hot exhause woud "poison" and render ineffective the catalysts in the converter. Ethyls worldwide sales proved to be a lifeline when US markets started to shrink in as the cataylytic converter was adopted across the product line1976. By 1979 Ethyl's overall international sales of TEL exceeded domestic sales. The health related phaseout of leaded gasoline in Europe in the 1990s meant that Ethyl sales would be increasingly confined to Third World markets. Today, over 90% of all gasoline sold in Africa and the Middle East is still leaded, while over 30% of Asian and Latin American gasoline is also leaded. |
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