Archive for alternate fuel

I’m always intrigued by eco-friendly inventions that look like they’d be more at home on a sketch pad actually come to fruition. Travel and transportation ideas remain at the forefront of environmentally research as experts realise that our need to travel isn’t likely to end but we have to find new pollution free methods to do so. High speed transportation between two cities in fairly close proximity to each other (let’s say 500km / 310 miles) is usually the domain of private car, airliner or passenger rail but a new high speed ecobus might provide an alternative in the near future.

While it’s called a ‘bus’ it looks to me far more like a sporty stretch limousine to me, but this monster is 100% electric. The ‘Superbus Project’ is Dutch and a working prototype is already being tested with trials scheduled next month in the U.A.E. who have shown a keen interest in the idea. Trial runs between Abu Dhabi and Dubai will hopefully cement a commitment to bringing the project to the end market. The concept is very cool, the sleek bus will be fully equipped for luxury business class travel and able to seat up to 23 passengers as it whisks them between cities at speeds of up to 250 kmh / 155 mph which is faster than many rail links. Of course the bus wouldn’t be able to share conventional highway space at the speed and the idea includes construction of a concrete track from city to city where the bus would complete the bulk of the journey.

The bus looks like an extended sports vehicle with an overall length of 15 metres and 8 doors on each side to allow for easy access for all pasengers. It would be powered by a fully rechargeable Li-Lon batteries which would power a 300 kW electric motor. The entire construction and chassis would feature lightweight alloys and plastics and environmental considerations that eliminate any emissions post construction. The designers feel that the flexibility the service could offer with no set schedules or logistics compared with rail or planes could see it capture the business market, perhaps as importantly they expect that fares to use the bus will be comparable to the alternatives now available.

The project began in 2004 and if tests with the prototypes are met with positive response its anticipated that the implementation of regular service can begin as early as 2015. I’d love to see such a progressive option succeed and I hope the huge costs of infrastructure for tracks and tunnels as depicted on their video (below) won’t see the project fail to make inroads.

You can learn much more at the official site for the project.

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Watch the Superbus video

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Unless you’re incredibly optimistic or know something that I don’t, you’ll probably agree that gasoline prices aren’t going to be going down anytime soon if ever. I’ve long felt that rapid inflation in the cost of oil would be the single greatest catalyst for alternative energy vehicles and it seems that my theory will be tested in practice over the coming years. With few exceptions 2011 has seen the price to fill up your car reach record levels and a myriad of different reasons leave industry experts predicting that the worst is yet to come. While electric vehicles still face a number of obstacles which I’ve written about before such as range, ease of recharge, cost and variety there’s another viable alternate that might be arriving a little sooner than had previously been forecast.

Hydrogen has long been considered a potential market changer for vehicle fuel, although the technology required has always seemed to be too far over the horizon to be considered sensibly although that may well change. In the UK a team of scientists are hoping that a hydrogen-based fuel could be on the market much sooner than forecast. The pump price might be as low as a $1.10 per gallon / $0.29 per litre which is less than a third of what is being paid in North America for gasoline and about a fifth of current prices in Europe. Even if these projections are off by 25 percent such an option would completely change the playing field for the automotive industry, road transport costs and consumers/businesses.

Beyond the economic impacts and environmental ones, hydrogen is close to being the ideal fuel, cheaper to transport, provides more energy versus its weight and best of all when it burns the only byproduct is water.

The first road tests for this alternate fuel are scheduled to commence in 2012 and if everything proceeds as hoped it could be on sale just four or five years from now. The technology of engine power from hydrogen fuel is less of an obstacle than the storage of the fuel. To date storing hydrogen has required expensive high-pressure cylinders or supercooled liquids to keep the gas safe. A company called Cellar Energy have found a way that could solve this giant issue, they have developed microbeads that can be added to hydrogen to trap the compound and create synthetic fuel with the consistency of liquid. Hopefully you know far more about science than I do and it makes sense to you as I’ll just have to take their word.

What does this do for existing automobiles? This was the part that astounded me, it’s hoped that the current testing will demonstrate that an existing vehicle could use the new blend without any engine modification. That is simply remarkable, an engine designed for gasoline used to instead run upon hydrogen fuel with the only discharge from your exhaust pipe being water vapour. I’m hopeful that this will come to fruition.

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Although its position as the largest single car and truck market in the world may well change over the next decade, the US still holds that position as it has done ever since cars were mass-produced. Very pertinent then that the Obama administration is poised to shortly announce the newest details of changes for fuel economy and greenhouse gas emissions for cars and light trucks. In conjunction with the Environmental Protection Agency the US Transportation Department is now working on plans that will set the guidelines for vehicles constructed in model years 2017 to 2025. While that seems a long way in the future the regulations laid out soon will dictate the direction the automakers will need to take to secure their piece of the market. More importantly the approved regulations will result in a substantial reduction in oil consumption, it’s just a pity the part of the regulations don’t mandate that a certain amount of vehicles are electric or hybrids.

This will represent a rapidly constructed series of standards as the administration only recently released the standards for 2012-2016 in May of this year. The official targets have yet to be published but an internal presidential memo in May stated that the new review must achieve:

“substantial annual progress in reducing transportation sector greenhouse gas emissions and fossil fuel consumption, strengthen the industry and enhance job creation in the United States.”

fuel-gaugeThe sad reality is because the lessons of the fuel shortage in the 1970s were never learned, both governments and the industry are playing catch-up at a rate which will be difficult to achieve. What environmental groups are urging versus what the industry feels it can achieve are very different indeed. The most recent standards look to raise the countries average fuel economy to just over 35 mpg by the year 2016. Environmental groups are lobbying to raise efficiency standards to at least 60 mpg by 2025. Considering the industry has struggled to add an extra 12 miles per gallon in the last 30 years I can’t see how they will manage to add 30 more in the next 15. However, it is what is necessary and it is what should be done. I think as we get nearer to these deadlines the reality that conventional gasoline vehicles which are not hybrids (at the very least) are coming to the end of their existence. Environmental concerns one would hope would propel these changes alone although in all likelihood a return to a five dollar gallons with no reduction in sight will impact consumers and automakers more rapidly than all the best intentions within the halls of government.

The debate will rage on all fronts in the years to come, automakers will cite technology and cost being the roadblocks that can’t be overcome. Lobbyists and a changing consumer profile will insist that we can’t inch along to fuel efficiency rates that are so far advanced from where we are now. Governments all over the world not just the US will legislate the point in the middle where the industry must go, concessions will be made along the way but playing catch-up is never easy especially when the standards were far too slack for far too long.

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Categories : Car and Fuel, Go Green
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