As of 2002, there were 590 million passenger cars worldwide (roughly one car per eleven people).[2] Around the world, there were about 806 million cars and light trucks on the road in 2007; they burn over 260 billion gallons of gasoline and diesel fuel yearly. The numbers are increasing rapidly, especially in China and India
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Sunday, June 21, 2009
590 million passenger cars worldwide
As of 2002, there were 590 million passenger cars worldwide (roughly one car per eleven people).[2] Around the world, there were about 806 million cars and light trucks on the road in 2007; they burn over 260 billion gallons of gasoline and diesel fuel yearly. The numbers are increasing rapidly, especially in China and India
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- Steam power
- The first electric cars
- Exhaust gases are also cleaned up
- Gasoline engines
- Diesel-engined cars
- Fuel and propulsion technologies
- Morris in Europe
- Reflecting the rapid pace
- mass-produced to meet market needs
- Development of automotive technology
- automotive industry
- Ford's complex
- fast-drying Duco
- affordable automobiles
- German engineer Rudolf Diesel
- Veteran Car Club of Great Britain
- Emile Levassor and Armand Peugeot of France
- automobiles Mercedes Benz
- DMG and Benz & Cie
- Daimler-Mercedes
- internal-combustion flat engine
- Benz began promotion
- internal combustion engine
- French inventor
- first internal combustion engine
- Ferdinand Verbiest, a member powered vehicle
- Etymology
- 590 million passenger cars worldwide
- Automobile is far from precise
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