s8v4o
Senior Member
- Joined
- May 18, 2007
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Burning ethanol still produces carbon dioxide afaik. Thats at least partly why its an issue for environmentalists.
Can we even produce enough ethanol to achieve energy independence? I read sugar cane is much better for it than corn but we have limited areas to produce cane in this country. Climate isn't right for it.
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Most people don't realize that ethanol is almost carbon neutral. Corn or any plant used to make ethanol spends it's whole life scrubbing CO2 and locks that carbon in the plant. That same carbon is then released during the burning of ethanol. This cycle just happens over and over again.
Meanwhile this doesn't happen with fossil fuels. When we pump crude oil out of the ground and burn it we just keep adding CO2 to the atmosphere. There's no give and take relationship there.
Why e30 and e50?
Depends on the application. Right now I use E85 and don't fully utilize it from an octane standpoint. I would love to have a blender pump nearby that allowed me to run something like E50. That way I would get great octane and increase my mileage over E85 since I don't have a 14.0:1 compression engine.
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