The Gases of Life are Not Pollutants
Our atmosphere contains the four gases of life – nitrogen, oxygen, water vapor, and carbon dioxide.
Nitrogen is the most abundant gas-of-life in the atmosphere (78%). It is an essential building block of amino acids present in all proteins. It is a very stable, unreactive gas, but micro-organisms in the soil and some plants are able to extract nitrogen from the atmosphere, making it available to growing plants. Lightning also manages to oxidize some atmospheric nitrogen.
Oxygen is the second most abundant gas-of-life in the atmosphere (21%). Every animal absorbs oxygen with every breath, using it to fuel bodily digestion of the foods animals eat. This process builds bodies and provides the energy of muscles. In the great oxygen cycle, plants extract oxygen from carbon dioxide and exhale it to the atmosphere for animals to breathe.
Water vapor is the third most abundant gas-of-life in the atmosphere (varies up to 5%). Water vapor is part of the great water cycle, where water is evaporated into the atmosphere from salty seas, surface water, and plants. Rain and snow return it to the surface supply of fresh water. No animals, plants, or sea creatures could exist without water.
Water vapor is the most effective “greenhouse gas” in the atmosphere, with far more effect than carbon dioxide. It reduces incoming solar radiation by day and reduces surface cooling at night. Water is also a global temperature stabilizer – heat is transferred from oceans and land as latent heat by evaporation, forming clouds that often cool the surface.
Finally, carbon dioxide is the least abundant gas-of-life in the atmosphere (0.04%) – just a trace, but a vitally important trace. No plants could exist on Earth without carbon dioxide, and no animals could exist without plants. Plants extract carbon dioxide from the atmosphere to form proteins, sugars, and carbohydrates, and animals add essential minerals to turn these into protein, fat, sinews, and bones. The carbon from carbon dioxide is the building block for all life on Earth, for every bit of organic material, and for every carbon fuel – oil, gas, and coal.
Carbon dioxide is a “greenhouse gas” that tends to retain some surface warmth, but there is no evidence in ancient or modern temperature records to suggest that carbon dioxide is a dominant factor controlling global temperature.
None of these natural gases is toxic to life under any feasible atmospheric conditions, but all can be toxic above certain levels. For carbon dioxide, toxic effects on humans don’t even begin until it is fifty times the present atmospheric level – our exhaled breath is 100 times current levels in the atmosphere.
No thinking person could class any of these gases as an atmospheric pollutant – they are all naturally occurring, non-toxic, essential gases of life. Together they make up 95% of the human body, which is effectively 68% carbon dioxide. So if carbon dioxide is a pollutant, the human body is badly polluted.