Running on a mix of oil and petrol, the scooter spews out between tens and thousands of times more fine particles and toxic gases, proportionate to the amount of fuel consumed, than even heavy trucks and buses, they said.
In choked cities such as Bangkok, the vast fleet of these "super-polluters" may be the biggest single source of roadside emissions, the researchers said.
"Cars and trucks, particularly diesel vehicles, are thought to be the main vehicular pollution sources. This needs re-thinking, as we show that elevated particulate matter levels can be a consequence of 'asymmetric pollution' from two-stroke scooters," they wrote.
Emissions of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), a bouquet of carbon gases that are precursors for smog were on average 124 times higher from an idling two-stroke scooter than for a vehicle from another class.
Levels of benzene, a cancer-causing VOC, were astounding, Prevot's team found.
Scooter exhaust during idling had as much as 300,000 micro grams (mcg) of benzene per cubic metre, or 146 parts per million (ppm), the scientists found.
By comparison, the European Union (EU) sets a safety level for annual exposure of five mcg/cu. M., while health watchdogs in the United States recommend that workers wear special breathing equipment when exposed to benzene levels exceeding 1ppm for 15 minutes.
The paper calculated that in cities such as Bangkok, two-stroke scooters could contribute between 60 and 90 per cent of all roadside primary particulate matter, carbon particles that result directly from fossil-fuel combustions, even though they account for only 10 percent of fuel consumption.
The scooters' overall impact may even be a conservative estimate, Prevot said.
Auto rickshaws tested in India yielded five times more emissions on average than the European scooter, he said.
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