According to Larry Moore, owner of Larry’s AutoWorks, a Diamond Certified company, changing your car’s oil too often isn’t good for the environment. If you want to help reduce pollution, Mr. Moore suggests changing your oil less frequently and requesting re-refined oil the next time you have your car serviced. “Re-refined oil is higher quality today than it was originally—even Mercedes uses it,” he says. “It’s made without pulling oil out of the ground, and it costs 85 percent less to re-refine oil than it does to make new oil, so that’s a huge savings you can make in your carbon footprint.”

Mr. Moore says brake pads are also getting Greener. Primarily, manufacturers will have to reduce the copper content in all brake pads by 2014. In fact, copper-free brake pads are already available and don’t cost any more than regular pads. More shops will start carrying them if consumers start requesting them.

3 Responses

  1. Lynda Cole says:

    Great tips, Chris. I’ve never even heard of re-refined oil. I’ll ask for it next time I have an oil change.

  2. Bruce G Hoag says:

    I must admit that I’m not familiar with the term “re-fined oil.”

    Is that the same as synthetic oil?

    • Matt Solis says:

      Not quite. Re-refined oil is essentially oil that’s been recycled through a series of filtering, blending and distillation processes. Some methods even use hydro-treatment to produce a high-quality base oil that’s also odorless and colorless. Hope that helps!

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