## Abstract Battery and hybrid vehicles are today's sustainable mobility solutions, preparing a future shared with a hydrogen economy. The summary report of the EU High Level Group for Hydrogen and Fuel Cells, presented in June 2003, develops a vision on the contribution that hydrogen and fuel cell
The car and fuel of the future
β Scribed by Joseph Romm
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 161 KB
- Volume
- 34
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0301-4215
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This paper is based on a review of the technical literature on alternative fuel vehicles (AFVs) and discussions with experts in vehicle technology and energy analysis. It is derived from analysis provided to the bipartisan National Commission on Energy Policy.
The urgent need to reverse the business-as-usual growth path in global warming pollution in the next two decades to avoid serious if not catastrophic climate change necessitates action to make our vehicles far less polluting.
In the near-term, by far the most cost-effective strategy for reducing emissions and fuel use is efficiency. The car of the near future is the hybrid gasoline-electric vehicle, because it can reduce gasoline consumption and greenhouse gas emissions 30 to 50% with no change in vehicle class and hence no loss of jobs or compromise on safety or performance. It will likely become the dominant vehicle platform by the year 2020.
Ultimately, we will need to replace gasoline with a zero-carbon fuel. All AFV pathways require technology advances and strong government action to succeed. Hydrogen is the most challenging of all alternative fuels, particularly because of the enormous effort needed to change our existing gasoline infrastructure.
The most promising AFV pathway is a hybrid that can be connected to the electric grid. These so-called plug-in hybrids or ehybrids will likely travel three to four times as far on a kilowatt-hour of renewable electricity as fuel cell vehicles. Ideally these advanced hybrids would also be a flexible fuel vehicle capable of running on a blend of biofuels and gasoline. Such a car could travel 500 miles on 1 gal of gasoline (and 5 gal of cellulosic ethanol) and have under one-tenth the greenhouse gas emissions of current hybrids.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
In its fiscal 2004, Novozymes A/S launched a new detergent enzyme Stainzyme which means that washing temperatures in Europe can be lowered, so reducing households' electricity bills in the longer term. Sales of detergent enzymes account for a third of Novozymes' turnover, making them its largest bus
FUEL PROBLEMS OF THE FUTURE.\* -Tilo most pressing fucI problem of tlio near futuro is bound up with tho social ideals of tho mining cInss, nnd the prcscnt stnndnrd of living of tho miner cnii only bo riiniiitnincd by co-opcrotioii bctwcen owncrs nnd miners, together wit11 consitlor:ition of tho ino