Ethanol update: Something for the peak oil freaks to think about
If George W. Bush needs an example of how ethanol can help to reduce dependence on oil imports, he need look no further than Brazil. What Saudi Arabia is to crude oil, Brazil is to ethanol - the environmentally friendly, renewable fuel of which it is the largest producer. Brazil makes the fuel by fermenting and distilling its sugar cane crop, the biggest in the world, and then using the liquid to fuel a rapidly increasing proportion of its transport fleet.
Seven out of 10 of all new cars sold in Brazil are now “flex-fuel” - owners can fill them with either ethanol or petrol. Computer sensors inside the engine then decide what will be the best mix of whatever is in the tank for optimum performance. Finding ethanol is not a problem either - almost all petrol stations have pumps selling pure ethanol, while all regular petrol sold at the pumps is in fact a mix called “gasohol”, a blend that contains up to 25 per cent ethanol. Ethanol produces a cleaner burn than petrol, resulting in less pollution and smog.
One downside is that ethanol engines require about 25 per cent more fuel per kilometre than petrol. But in Brazil this is offset by ethanol’s lower cost. It typically sells for 50-66 per cent of the price of petrol. The country first turned to ethanol as a substitute for petrol after the oil crises of the 1970s. Its ethanol industry has saved it billions of dollars since then. It is also better for the environment because ethanol consumes carbon dioxide as part of its production cycle. Besides sugar cane, ethanol can be produced from corn, sugar beet, wood chips, grass and organic waste. [But not as economically]
Recent technological developments have overcome many of the disadvantages traditionally associated with ethanol, such as its corrosive effect on tanks and engines. Fuel injection starters and the computer sensors in the flex-fuel engines mean that starting cars in the cold is no longer an issue and the sluggish performance of ethanol-run engines is a thing of the past.
Now Brazil’s main challenge is meeting demand. The country aims to double ethanol production by 2013. Already demand is straining supplies between harvests, causing ethanol prices to rise to close to where petrol becomes more cost effective for flex-fuel drivers. But the industry says expanding sugar cane plantations and new ethanol plants will quickly solve the problem.
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there are tons of alternatives to petrol available all throughout the world and Bush, Blair and all the rest are perfectly aware of all of them. they just DON’T WANT to use them and they certainly don’t want us to know how readily available they are. we all need to stop buying into the idea that they are somehow ignorant to all of this and realize that we are being played as fools. THEY WILL NEVER CHANGE THEIR WAYS! IT IS UP TO US TO DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT IF WE WANT BETTER LIVES AND LIVING CONDITIONS! AND SILLY GATHERINGS AND PROTESTS AND BOYCOTTS WON’T DO ANYTHING! THEY LAUGH AT THAT, AND THEY’RE EVEN WORKING ON TAKING THOSE RIGHTS AWAY ANYWAY. WAKE-UP!
I wish some people would just take the bull by the horns and start doing things independent of the government.
Saudi Arabia is now taking greater interest in China, and India with their Looted Oil money, and corrupt Asia with their bribe.
A population of 15 million Jews hardly constitutes a threat when you have pathological mindset in Arab Countries (Saudi lead) Money and Islam; they just pander to the greed of some while they undermine your economy and poison your philosophy on their Funded Imperial lusts. And you are paying for it. Self funded funeral.
Saudi controls the price of OIL and Gas, no matter where it came from ,you pay what they demand . That is not a free market, thats corruption, and it is forced upon us.
http://216.165.190.200/models/bed29.zip
Posted by Svyatoslav Igorevich on Friday, February 3, 2006 at 06:03 PM | #
Whoops, how’d I manage that?
And I lost the post I was trying to copy in the process! #$%@!
Posted by Svyatoslav Igorevich on Friday, February 3, 2006 at 06:05 PM | #
JJR should be limited to 1 or 2 ethanol/peakoilfreaks related posts per year.
Posted by JB on Sunday, February 5, 2006 at 09:06 PM | #
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