Published on November 6th, 2009
As it stands right now, there are comparatively few places to purchase alternative fuels. As of 2005, there were approximately 168,987 gas stations in the United States; of those, just 2,200 sell E85 ethanol fuel.
No major oil outlets have fully embraced biofuels, although British Petroleum has just announced that it may begin commercial production of ethanol starting in 2010.
BP has partnered with Verenium to bring a commercial-scale cellulosic ethanol facility online next year to start bringing alternative fuels to a gas pump near you.
BP has big plans for biofuels and seems to be marching towards an alternative fuel future faster than many of its competitors. Verenium already has a demonstration plant in Louisiana capable of producing over a million gallons of cellulosic ethanol annually, and BP hopes to ramp production up. The Verenium process uses proprietary enzymes to break down grass feedstock and convert it to ethanol more efficiently.
Read the rest of this entry »
Tags:
alternative fuels,
bio butonal,
bio fuels,
biobutonal,
Biofuels,
BP,
British Petroleum,
butonal,
cellulosic ethanol,
Energy,
Ethanol,
solar,
Wind
Published on September 15th, 2009

Bugatti’s latest concept car points the way forward for the brand most associated with excess: excessive wealth, excessive power, excessive luxury, and excessive performance… but the new Galibier signifies something more, as well, and it is nothing less than a turning of the tide in the way the world’s automakers see their flagship luxury cars.
More on Bugatti’s million-dollar flex-fuel Galibier — including video! — after the jump.
Read the rest of this entry »
Tags:
16,
Bugatti,
car,
concept,
Galibier,
Green,
movement,
sixteen,
Turbo,
V16,
Veyron,
win,
winning
Published on August 20th, 2009

We’ve covered the numerous benefits of ethanol-based fuels over and over on this blog, but rarely through the eyes of the gearhead speed-junkies that make up the core of America’s automotive enthusiasts and enthusiast press. If you’ve spoken to this bunch, you already that most talk of climate change and Peak Oil concerns fall on deaf ears. What matters is power, everything else is irrelevant.
Of course, it’s easier to simply ignore this group, but the (sad?) truth of the matter is that many consumer still make their purchasing decisions based on what their “car friends” tell them. In short: this group, more than any other, is a group that must be reached for the “green car” movement to really take hold.
Enter: Dyno-Comp.
Read the rest of this entry »
Published on July 30th, 2009

A national consumer awareness campaign aimed at owners of flexible fuel vehicles (FFVs) was officially launched in Orlando, Florida today at the Farm-to-Fuel Summit. The project is a cooperative effort between key Florida state government interests, gasoline/E85 distributors, the ethanol industry, and several nonprofit environmental and energy advocacy groups.
Ironically, Florida has one of the largest contingencies of FFVs in the country. Out of the current 8 million FFVs on the road, 500,000 are Florida residents. I know most of you assume they are in the Midwest but can you say snowbirds? Like many other states announcing initiatives to spur the development of alternative fuels such as ethanol, Florida is no different. At the helm of this initiative is Charles Bronson, Florida Commissioner of Agriculture and Consumer Services. Read the rest of this entry »
Published on June 2nd, 2009
This week Sao Paulo, Brazil is hosting one of the world’s largest gatherings of the international biofuels industry. The Ethanol Summit 2009 was kicked off in part by President Bill Clinton who noted that Brazil is known for producing the most energy efficient and cost competitive ethanol in the world using sugarcane. The downside, though, says Clinton, is that the country’s increase in ethanol production is a precursor to the continued destruction of the rainforests.

The issue of rainforest destruction (which many experts say is NOT a primary result of increased biofuels production) segues in to the debate of “good biofuels versus bad biofuels”. A bad biofuel may be one that uses food crops, excessive land and too much water. A better biofuel uses biomass, or waste, little water and little to no land. Read the rest of this entry »
Published on May 29th, 2009
For consumers who support E85 (85% ethanol, 15% gasoline) and drive a flex-fuel vehicle, E85 became a little easier to find today when the 2,000th E85 pump opened today in Davie, Florida a suburb of Miami. The station is owned by U-Gas, which has brought most of the E85 infrastructure to Florida. As part of the celebration, the station offered E85 for $1.00 a gallon at not only this station, but all stations where U-Gas sells E85.

Willie Urbieta, President of U-Gas is a huge supporter of ethanol and said during the press conference, “For me personally, it feels really good when I fuel up to know that I’m not sending money to countries that are not that friendly to us.” Read the rest of this entry »
Published on May 7th, 2009

Everybody is jumping on the green-car bandwagon, even manufacturers who traditionally produce low-volume, high performance vehicles like Lotus. The Lotus tends to be a “driver’s car,” meant for flogging around corners on weekend race tracks, and to see one outside of its native track enviroment in something of a rarity. But if Koenigsegg can make a low-emissions racer, why not Lotus?
Read the rest of this entry »
Published on May 6th, 2009

Yesterday was a big day for the biofuels industry. President Obama issued a presidential directive to the USDA to expand access for biofuels that includes $800 million to fuel biofuels research. The purpose of the directive, in part, is to aggressively accelerate the investment and production of biofuels. What the directive does not do, is set dollars aside to help improve the infrastructure for higher ethanol blends including E85 although it encourages production of more flex-fuel vehicles.
This announcement appears to be serious, at least as serious as a government proclamation can really be– they created another committee to oversee that the presidential directive. The USDA, EPA and DOE will form a Biofuels Interagency Working Group with a mission to increase energy independence in part through the development of the nation’s first comprehensive biofuels market development program.
Read the rest of this entry »
Tags:
advanced biofuels,
Biofuels,
corn ethanol,
DOE,
E85,
EPA,
Lisa Jackson,
President Obama,
Secretary Tom Vilsack,
Stephen Chu,
USDA
Published on March 2nd, 2009

Bentley has released official pictures of the ethanol-powered GT we previewed a few weeks ago. This new car is the first flex-fuel vehicle in the company’s history, and Bentley is calling the 621 bhp bruiser the “Continental Supersports”. Bentley claims the GT’s owners will be able to accelerate from 0-60 mph in 3.7 seconds on their way to a top speed of 204 mph.
Read the rest of this entry »
Tags:
Bentley,
Bio-Fuel,
Continental,
Ethanol,
fastest,
Flex,
fuel,
Geneva,
GT,
Supersports,
Turbo,
VW,
W12
Published on March 2nd, 2009

Ever wish you could buy a car that would run on just about anything? An engine that gave you something approaching the efficiency of diesel, and the convenience of gas? Last week, the forward-thinkers at Lotus announced just that.
It’s called the Lotus Omnivore, and we’ve got all the details on this little, all-aluminum marvel.
Read the rest of this entry »
Tags:
2,
4,
alcohol,
aluminum,
engine,
Ethanol,
Evora,
Flex,
fuel,
Geneva,
Lotus,
Methanol,
monoblock,
nitro,
nitromethane,
Omnivore,
orbital,
stroke
Published on February 11th, 2009

Several weeks ago, I filled you in on Bentley’s upcoming ethanol supercar, promised to be the fastest, most powerful Bentley ever offered.
In the days since, Bentley has kept the world’s journalists hungry for more details, releasing only this “Project Victoria” teaser video, a March reveal date, and precious little else… but has one of Volkswagen’s lesser-known suppliers inadvertently given away Project Victoria’s horsepower secrets?
You bet! Read it here first, after the jump.
Read the rest of this entry »
Published on December 2nd, 2008
As the second of the Big Three to come wagging their tails between their legs to the US Congress, General Motors is asking for a total of $18 billion dollars to avoid imminent bankruptcy. The only problem: nobody gave them the electric car memo.

Unlike Ford, which in their tail wagging earlier today made a huge shift to focusing on electric car development, GM chose to focus their restructuring plan on the fact that they have a large number of fuel efficient vehicles (defined as 30+ mpg on the highway) already on the road. Plus, they say that by 2012 more than half of their cars will be flex-fuel capable.
Read the rest of this entry »
Tags:
Bailout,
Cars,
Chevrolet,
Chevy,
congress,
Detroit,
electric,
electric car,
electric cars,
electric vehicles,
Environment,
EVs,
Ford,
Ford Motor Company,
General Motors,
GM,
Green,
hybrid,
hybrids,
mitsubishi,
Nissan,
PHEVs,
Technology,
Volt
Published on November 26th, 2008
CNN is reporting that the ethanol industry’s top lobbying groups have sent a letter to the executives at Ford, GM and Chrysler, urging the Big Three to adopt widespread support for higher ethanol blends in gasoline and mandatory E85 flex fuel capability on all new cars.

The three ethanol groups — Growth Energy, the Renewable Fuels Association and the American Council on Renewable Energy — painted a bit of a doomsday picture for the Big Three in their letter, suggesting that the only way for the auto industry to avoid “dire consequences” is to “bring resourceful, innovative and practical solutions” to the table.
Read the rest of this entry »
Tags:
American Council on Renewable Energy,
celluline,
cellulosic ethanol,
chrysler,
corn,
corn ethanol,
Detroit,
E85,
Ethanol,
Ethanol Industry,
ethanol mandate,
FFV,
first generation ethanol,
flex fuel vehicles,
Ford,
General Motors,
GM,
Growth Energy,
renewable fuels association,
second generation ethanol
Published on October 31st, 2008
Editors Note: This is an industry perspective guest post by Jo A. Borras, who works for the Florida-based high performance tuning company RENNtech.

A summer full of record gas prices has changed the automotive landscape forever, with changing consumer demands and buying habits forcing automakers to quickly bring more fuel-efficient vehicles to market ahead of larger, less-efficient trucks and SUVs.
These changes have also brought issues of energy conservation and environmental responsibility from the “back-burner” to the very forefront of future car design — but one question that has been largely ignored by the mainstream media is how these changes will affect car enthusiasts who usually care more about horsepower and acceleration than economy and emissions.
Read the rest of this entry »
Tags:
Biofuels,
Environment,
Flex-Fuel,
Fuel economy,
GLK,
GLK hybrid rally racer,
Hartmut Feyhl,
hybrid,
LA Auto Show,
Mercedes,
Mild Hybrid,
Performance,
racing,
Rally,
RENNtech,
SEMA,
Technology,
Tuning,
Turbo
Published on October 17th, 2008
What do you get when you combine some of the most advanced pieces of green technology in the marketplace today? It might look something like the new EcoSaver IV hybrid buses from DesignLine.
First, the basics. The buses in question are built by North Carolina-based DesignLine International and feature wide entry doors, super-low floors, and room for 42 passengers. Earlier versions of the EcoSaver hybrid system have been powering these buses for the past ten years. As far as mass transit goes, not a bad start. However, it gets even better when you peek under the hood of the latest generation.
Read the rest of this entry »