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I am on my second vehicle that I have stopped changing my oil after the car has been broke in or around 90k. The first car I made it 400k miles before the rear end went out. The second car I'm at 130k with no oil change from 90k and runs just as good when I got it.

Does not changing the oil decrease the vehicles carbon footprint then changing it?

I watched the Discovery Channel and a Japanese Engineer said their engines are built efficiently enough not to need an oil change ever. I still add an oil stabilizer like Lucas every 4th quart when I top it off. I am not interested whether it is bad for an engine to do so. I just want to know if it more environmentally friendly not to change the oil?

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  • $\begingroup$ Claims made by that engineer need to be treated carefully. It may only apply to more recently made engines & particularly recently made engines of the brand of car the person was talking about. Not changing the oil will increase the rate of wear in engine & the carbon foot print will increase due to oil being burned within the engine as parts loosen through wear. Over time engine oil will become acidic & adversely react with engine parts. It also accumulates wear fragments from the engine which needs to be removed to prevent additional engine wear via abrasion from the small fragments. $\endgroup$
    – Fred
    Commented Jun 19, 2019 at 3:10
  • $\begingroup$ Also, if you take your used oil to the auto parts store to be recycled, the effective carbon footprint should be very small. $\endgroup$
    – jamesqf
    Commented Jun 19, 2019 at 4:35

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This is an interesting question, and a life cycle emissions analysis can give a pretty good answer. Obviously there are a lot of variables, so some basic assumptions have to be made.

We start with the CO2 equivalent emissions from building and driving a car over its lifetime. There are various analyses out there, but here is one that I found which gives the following values for a typical gasoline powered automobile over a "typical" lifetime of 150,000 km (93,000 miles): 24,000 kg of CO2e emissions total, of which 5600 kg is from the fabrication of the car.

For the oil, I found this, which gives a range of 2.5 to 13 kg CO2e per gallon of motor oil. The lower value assumes the new oil is made from recycled oil, and the waste oil is sent to a recycler. The higher value assumes the new oil is not from a recycled source, and the waste oil is not recycled. For the most extreme case, we can assume virgin oil, and assume the oil is changed every 3000 miles, and that the car holds 4 quarts (1 gallon). That makes 31 oil changes in the car's lifetime, which gives 403 kg of CO2e from oil changes. Another perfectly reasonable value might be to assume recycling and assume an oil change every 7000 miles which results in 33 kg CO2e emissions.

So the oil changes are contributing something in the 30 to 400 kg range over the life of the car, compared with 24,000 kg from building and driving the car. Skipping all oil changes in the most extreme case results in less than 2% reduction in total CO2e emissions. You can get almost exactly the same result by changing the oil every 7000 miles instead of every 3000, and by using recycled oil and making sure that your used oil is recycled.

Even though you're not asking about it, I have to add that I think you have been exceptionally lucky if you drove 400,000 miles without changing the oil. I don't think you should expect that result again. And note that the emissions associated with building a car are 5600 kg - 10 to 100 times greater than the emissions contributed by changing the oil. If you don't change the oil in any car again for your entire life, and end up ruining just one car as a result, you will cause far more emissions than you saved.

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  • $\begingroup$ You might want to also factor in the decrease in fuel efficiency when running with old oil. It would only compound the issue. $\endgroup$
    – JMac
    Commented Jun 19, 2019 at 11:47

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