Alternative Fuels Are Found at Your Favorite Restaurant
Filed Under (Alternative vehicle power, Biofuels, waste to energy) by faadia on 03-06-2009
Tagged Under : alternative fuels, Biofuels, recycled vegetable oil, vegetable oil cars
Early Experimentation with Alternative Fuels
The first known use of vegetable oil as fuel was a demonstration of a diesel engine built by the Otto Company and designed to burn mineral oil. They tested it to run on pure peanut oil at the 1900
World’s Fair and it worked.
Another example of vegetable oil being used as fuel was investigated by Rudolf Diesel, the inventor of the diesel engine. Using vegetable oil to fuel engines of his design, in a 1912 presentation to the British Institute of Mechanical Engineers, he cited a number of efforts in this area and remarked, “The fact that fat oils from vegetable sources can be used may seem insignificant today, but such oils may perhaps become in course of time of the same importance as some natural mineral oils and the tar products are now.” What an uncannily accurate predication from almost 100 years ago.
Today, many people are experimenting and turning over to alternative fuels. With gas and diesel prices always on the rise and the more apparent environmental risk from using fossil fuels, consumers are looking for alternatives that can help power their engines.
Fast Food Fuel
Companies like GreaseCar knows exactly how consumers feel. They sell deluxe kits to convert your car into a bio-fuel car that uses used vegetable oil from restaurants. Most of these alternative fuel users utilize filtered frying oil that is collected from local restaurants. Most restaurants are happy to give their oil away as they generally have to pay a fee for proper disposal.
Going Green Means Big Savings for an Alabama School System
Recently in the news, agriculture officials and the Montgomery Public School system in Alabama are exploring the possibility of using cooking oil from the school’s cafeteria to fuel their fleet of school buses. Starting this fall, Alabama State students will collect cooking oil from the cafeterias, turn it into biofuel and use it to run buses in a pilot program. Students at the schools will also be encouraged to bring used oil from their homes.
“When we’re able to collect this grease and fuel for 72 cents a gallon, hopefully we’ll be able to do two things – we’re going to lower the fuel cost for the school systems and we’re going to be environmentally friendly,” state agriculture commissioner Ron Sparks said Wednesday. 
Having a steady and reliable supply of fuel that is less than a dollar a gallon and safe for the environment sounds like a win-win idea to a lot of folks.
Farmers Turn to Biofuel Cash Crops
Across the nation, farmers are growing cash crops canola and other vegetables in hopes of selling them for alternative biofuels. Some Pacific island nations are already using coconut oil as fuel to reduce their expenses and their dependence on imported fuels, while helping stabilize the coconut oil market. Coconut oil is only usable where temperatures do not drop below 62 degrees Fahrenheit, which makes it perfect for use in the South Pacific region.
Check out Dueling Fuel’s overview of the top alternative energy technologies being developed today including solar farms, tidal turbines, waste to energy sources, and much more throughout the site.












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