It was used in refrigirators.
CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons) currently make up less than 1% of greenhouse gases in the Earth's atmosphere.
Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) are non-toxic.
CFCs or chlorofluorocarbons are released when a device that holds it is leaking. Also some aerosols release CFCs into the atmosphere.
No, trees do not absorb CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons). CFCs are synthetic compounds used as refrigerants that are primarily broken down in the atmosphere by sunlight. Trees primarily absorb carbon dioxide, not CFCs.
CFCs were the compressed gas that was used as "spring" to push the can contents out of the container. CFCs have been replaced with HCFCs as a consequence of the Montreal Protocol.
By the CFCs being sorced into the air, the sun is Breaking them down into the earth.
about 15%
68.7%
60%
Old refrigerator's, car air conditioning, basically anything that needs to keep cool, CFC's are very toxic don't mess around with anything that uses them.
60% because the decimal 0.6 uses 1 as its base until, while a percentage uses 100 as the base until, therefore all you need to do to convert a decimal to a percentage is multiply it by 100.