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What a sad sad fact. :(

Discussion in 'Environmental Discussion' started by cireecnop1, Mar 28, 2007.

  1. cireecnop1

    cireecnop1 New Member

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  2. daronspicher

    daronspicher Active Member

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    The photo op is no big surprise. The plan is better than no plan..... You're on the Prius forum, so you thought you'd toss up a link to that article and say poo-poo so that everyone can chime in and yell 'atta-boy', but I don't really think you know why you said poo-poo.. I hope you will take a bit to spell it out here if you actually do know why you kabosh this whole thing.

    To pre-empt... Ethanol is a good thing. Fuel from corn and other crops is a good thing, but I also think having a US car fleet running on ethanol is more volitile than having the fleet running on middle eastern oil. The price of ethanol based fuel is 2.60/gallon and someone says they think there is going to be a drought in the heartland and tomorrow the price of fuel is 3.50 a gallon and the crop is only knee high. The next day they get a good rain storm and it takes 3 weeks for fuel to drop back to $3.00.

    Hybrid is ok, the prius is the answer to very little. I've saved the planet a little over 1600 gallons of fuel in the 13 months I've had my Prius, but I'm not typical. I'm more of the poster child for a 50+mpg commuter car and would be even better poster boy for 130mpg vehicle, or an all electric that could get me 150 miles a day.

    People commuting 50miles a day and under should be buying $18000 full electric plugins with 100 mile daily range. If the big 3 built them, we (America) wouldn't buy them in mass because Americans are for the most part really stupid when it comes to making good decisions.

    So you take what they're doing in the dog-n-pony show and credit them for at least doing something... they have the development teams working on fuel efficient technology and we are now years ahead of starting research on all this if we ever do get in a real pinch with the mideast. We have new technologies in the bag so to speak and more coming every year as r&d rolls on.

    As long as we're not in a real pinch, they'll move it along fairly slowly and Japan will likely beat the big 3 to market with just about every new technology that we see in the next 30 years. Don't buy big 3 stocks... Still no reason to poo-poo the effort.. just be happy they are making one.

    Until you take your own 400mpg car to market, lay off the guys who are working on the new technologies that we all think we want. Once you point us to your website where your prototype with proven stats is ready for us to browse, feel free to hack at the big 3 all you want.
     
  3. cireecnop1

    cireecnop1 New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(daronspicher @ Mar 28 2007, 07:47 PM) [snapback]413897[/snapback]</div>
    Ooookaaay.....I'm not too sure why I would need to explain the reason I posted a link that was talking about fuel economy standards and how "the big three" are doing nothing to improve them......especially since this is a Prius site.


    thanks for the therapy session doc. :rolleyes: but I think it is still BS (poo-poo) how GM FORD and Diamler Chrysler are essentially getting away with not raising fuel economy in their vehicles just because they are spitting out a couple extra E85 compatible engines.

    just incase you missed this half of the article.....
    "....Here's why that's an issue. Automakers need to meet certain government standards for the fuel economy of their fleets. For flex-fuel cars, fuel economy is calculated based on the assumption that their owners use 50 percent gasoline and 50 percent ethanol. But the reality is that just 1 percent of the nation's flexible-fuel vehicles actually use what's known as E85—85 percent ethanol and 15 percent gasoline. The remaining 99 percent are using good old-fashioned gasoline.

    More greenhouse gases
    The result is anything but green. The more flex-fuel cars and trucks that are produced, the more gasoline is consumed—dramatically increasing greenhouse gas emissions and deepening the country's dependence on petroleum.
    The Union of Concerned Scientists estimates that without the policy in place, the U.S. would have burned 4 billion fewer gallons of gasoline since 1998. "Automakers have an [economic] incentive to sell cars less efficient than the law requires," says Don MacKenzie, a vehicles engineer for the Union's clean vehicles program.

    Environmental advocates aren't shy about voicing their outrage. "It's a total scam," says Dan Becker, director of the Sierra Club's global warming program. "The automakers are trying to shield themselves from having to make more efficient vehicles. They're avoiding the path to cutting oil dependence, curbing global warming, saving consumers money, and ultimately saving Detroit from competitors like Toyota......"

    Sorry if I ruffled your feathers... :mellow:
     
  4. efusco

    efusco Moderator Emeritus
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    Ok, lets be friendly here.
    First of all, OP, it's bad form to start a topic and include only a link to something else with no comment, no quotes or anything else. You should include a relevant quote from the article, your comments of what you like, don't like and why you think it's relevant to PCr's. It's only considerate of people's time as some will have no interest and others might not click the link even though the article would interest them if you'd bothered to make a point to say what it was about.

    Second, this is old news and there are multiple threads on this topic already posted. You should at least do a cursory search for them under relevant forum.

    Finally, post under the proper or at least somewhat relevant forum. I moved to environmental, it could be under 'other cars' or 'Prius and hybrid news', but it's really not Main Forum material as the main subject is not the Prius.
     
  5. NoMoShocks

    NoMoShocks Electrical Engineer

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    Makes sense to me. These loopholes need to be closed. There is no excuse for allowing less efficient, dirtier cars under the guise of running on alternative feuls that do not exist in general distribution.

    As far as biodeisel, if the exuast smells anthing like regular diesel exhuast, and just as carsinogenic, then I don't see that as any solution at all. I think diesel should be limited only to vehicles that actually must use it.

    This doesn't seem to have any relation to Hybrid Synergy Drive vehicles.
     
  6. Mirza

    Mirza New Member

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  7. Marlin

    Marlin New Member

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    I acknowledge that many of you hold contempt for ethanol, but for the sake of arugment, lets assume ethanol is a good thing and that the problem with ethanol is there aren't many pumps that dispense it.

    Therefore, how can government increase the production and availability of ethanol? Create more demand for ethanol so that more is produced and more stations distrubute it. OK, then how can the government increase the demand for ethanol? Increase the number of vehicles that can use ethanol. Alright, then how can the government increase the number of vehicles that can use ethanol? Give incentives to automakers to build cars and trucks that can run on ethanol. Finally, what will happen if every car and truck in the US can run on ethanol? Ethanol will start replacing gasoline and maybe completely replace it 5, 10, or 15 years down the road. What happens if flex-fuel vehicles are never built? Ethanol will never replace gasoline.

    Of course, the above argument relies on the belief that ethanol is good, which I realize that many of you don't believe in. However, perhaps when they start making ethanol from non-corn sources, things will be better.
     
  8. tcjennings

    tcjennings New Member

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    Cellulosic ethanol production, once perfected, has the potential to cover 30% of our transportation needs without changing any farming habits -- that means the "food or fuel" argument is mostly solved by cellulosic ethanol. Other barriers to ethanol efficiency are purely political (sugar imports). (source: Science, March 9 or 16, 2007)

    My home state of Missouri has pending legislation that will give tax breaks to development of alternative fueling stations (E85). The article the OP links is at its base a chicken/egg problem. Personally I think it makes the most sense to have the flexfuel vehicles on the road before the fuels are widely available, because nobody's going to build the infrastructure if there aren't any customers. Fuel efficiency standards are a non sequitur in this conversation and still need to be addressed.
     
  9. donee

    donee New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(TeeSeeJay @ Mar 30 2007, 11:12 AM) [snapback]414817[/snapback]</div>
    Hi TeeSeeJay,

    Where would the cellulose go, if it was not made into fuel? Back into the ground, where it decomposes to refertilze the soil. While it may be possible for 30 % of transportation fuel to come from agriculture, I and very dubious if this is sustainable.

    Butanol has ready customers and is able to be made from agriculural products. It can be burned in most if not all gasoline cars without modification. It requires no special fuel transportation or storage. Butanol also has more energy content for the same processing overhead input.

    In light of Butanol, E85 seems like a way to con congress into special regulatory favors for the SUV maker. Especially, when these makers do not modify the engines to run at best efficiency on Ethanol, as well as gasoline. A true flex fuel vehicle would need a Prius like engine head, or other varbiable compressing technology (variable turbo charging ?) But this technology is not in these flex fuel SUV's! I do not think E85 has any impact on reducing oil imports or reducing green house gases. It does improve polutant emissions.

    Get rid of the special CAFE exclusion of E85 vehicles, and I might change my mind on the con-job opinion. I think the E85 CAFE exclusion is totally inappropriate, as Ethanol requires fossil fuel resources (special transportation, fermentation, fertilization) similar to the end energy result.

    Ethanol works in Brazil, because the engines are for the most part ethanol only (high compression ratio - inexpensive), and light weight vehicles.
     
  10. Godiva

    Godiva AmeriKan Citizen

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(daronspicher @ Mar 28 2007, 08:47 PM) [snapback]413897[/snapback]</div>
    Yeah, this is what I'm thinking too.

    I'm also not pleased with the push for CORN ethanol. I know that's a result of the corn lobby. see the other posts regarding corn, carbon sequestering, et al.