Mott the Hoople
Sweet Jane
Good post SF...and no anti-liberal rant (are you feeling well?). That emphasises my point. There are better crops that can be used on non-arable land for biofuel production then corn or sugar cane or other food crops.
Good post SF...and no anti-liberal rant (are you feeling well?). That emphasises my point. There are better crops that can be used on non-arable land for biofuel production then corn or sugar cane or other food crops.
By the way, bio-diesel is primarily diesel, with from 1-20% vegetable oil added. The best case is 20%, still burning a lot of diesel.
I think switch grass and multi-flora rosa have the best potentials for biofuels as the cost of planting/harvesting are far less then others, such as corn, sugar cane, soy bean, conala seed, sunflower seed, etc, and you can grown them on land that is marginal for agricultural crops.switchgrass FTW
http://bioenergy.ornl.gov/papers/misc/switgrs.html
You could never site this off any coast in America. Remember Ted Kennedy's battle with windmills?best idea I've heard so far is a proposal the Japanese were working on....
ethanol from seaweed grown in salt water.....imagine huge floating seaweed farms harvesting cellulose for ethanol production on one end, harvesting farmed fish at the other....makes me want to go out and buy stock in the company....
You could never site this off any coast in America. Remember Ted Kennedy's battle with windmills?
Good idea though. Do they recycle the fish poop to fertilize the algae?
Good post SF...and no anti-liberal rant (are you feeling well?). That emphasises my point. There are better crops that can be used on non-arable land for biofuel production then corn or sugar cane or other food crops.
You could never site this off any coast in America. Remember Ted Kennedy's battle with windmills?
Good idea though. Do they recycle the fish poop to fertilize the algae?
Do fish eat that crap?and the fish would feed on the seaweed while growing.....perfect eco system....
Do fish eat that crap?
Using food crops to produce fuel grade alcohols doesn't really make a whole lot of sense. It's neither cost affective or sustainable in the long run. There are cellulosic plants well suited for producing alcohol that will grow on non-arable land which are much better suited for this purpose. Using crops like corn is important in that it can begin to produce the political and economic will to create the infrastructure for alcohol production and distribution by getting the buy in, economically and politically from farmers and agribusiness.
actually, best case is B100 grade, which most modern farm tractors and vehicles can utilize....B20 capacity is now standard equipment on all Chrysler diesel engines......
interesting note, did you know the first flex fuel vehicle was the Ford Model T made between 1907 and 1928?......it's carburetor was specifically calibrated to work on either ethanol or gasoline or any mixture of the two.....
a much cheaper, domestic fossil fuel....as is natural gas, another source of electricity.......
A cheap, dirty fuel which is destroying the enviroment it is mined in, contributing to global warming and poluting the earth with deadly mercury and causing acid rain. Far worse than that though is that coal is an unbeleivable resourse for manufacturing and burning it should be criminal.
Natural gas should be used as a bridge fuel for transportation till electric is further developed, not wasted in a false circular ethonol economy.
http://blog.heritage.org/?p=6300
it is far more expensive to modify vehicles to operate on natural gas than to modify them to run on ethanol.....
and this "false circular ethanol economy" claim is oil company propaganda.....
ethanol makes use of things that were otherwise going to waste, and despite what you claim, corn was in fact something going to waste in the late 1990s, and turns it into energy that reduces our reliance on imported fuel......
this is what you used to see in the Midwest even ten years ago....we had so much corn we didn't know what to do with it....prices were under $2 a bushel....
![]()
yes....or change the gaskets......if you want to drive an antique, take care of it....don't expect the world to remain static for your benefit.....
Anyone who's driving a classic or antique car and hasn't torn the engine down to replace the cork gaskets is dealing with a huge leaker anyway.![]()
Don't all REAL men drive trucks anyway?
When you start making it from waste, great. Right now it is being made from food.