Sunday, December 27, 2009

Does our space program, NASA destroy the ozone layer when rockets shoot through the atmosphere?

I think it doesDoes our space program, NASA destroy the ozone layer when rockets shoot through the atmosphere?
Actually it doesn't, the fuel to get into space is just liquid oxygen and hydrogen, that doesn't harm the ozone layer at all.





Don't worry little envioromentalist, one volcano explosion does more harm to the ozone then anything else in the world.





You enviormentalists need to chill out more.Does our space program, NASA destroy the ozone layer when rockets shoot through the atmosphere?
Rockets don't happen in the billions per day everyday. Even with all of the fuel they use, what they produce is nothing compared to what other things produce. Plus, it wouldn't also be NASA, but ESA and all of the other agencies around the world. They are important in terms of scientific advancement, we'd really miss them believe it or not if they were gone.
Airplanes are millions of times more destructive.
Actually, the aluminum perchlorate in the solid rocket boosters is mildly destructive to ozone, but not nearly so much as the chloroflurocarbons leaking out of old refrigerators.
suppy is right...who needs to take the most action is factories %26amp; chemical plants that grease the palms of politicans to look the other way !!!!!!!!!!!!1

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