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Benefits of Biodiesel Over Petrodiesel
Less toxic to humans
and the environment. Biodiesel is made from renewable resources,
burns more cleanly, is biodegradable, nontoxic, and not
considered a hazardous material when spilled, produces fewer hazardous
emissions when burned, and is essentially free of sulfur and aromatics.
It decomposes faster than sugar, and many say that it even smells good.
The
use of biodiesel in a conventional diesel engine results in a substantial
reduction of unburned hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide, and particulate
matter compared to emissions from diesel fuel. The exhaust emissions
of sulfur oxides and sulfates (major components of acid rain) from biodiesel
are essentially eliminated compared to diesel.
Of the major exhaust pollutants,
both unburned hydrocarbons and nitrogen oxides are ozone or smog forming
precursors. The use of biodiesel results
in a substantial reduction of unburned hydrocarbons. Emissions of nitrogen
oxides are either slightly reduced or slightly increased depending on
the duty cycle of the engine and testing methods used. The overall ozone
(smog) forming potential of the hydrocarbon exhaust emissions from biodiesel
is nearly 50 percent less than that measured for diesel fuel.
Biodiesel
is the best greenhouse gas mitigation strategy for today’s
medium and heavy duty vehicles. Biodiesel reduces net carbon dioxide
emissions by 78 percent compared to petroleum diesel. This is due to
biodiesel’s closed carbon cycle: the CO2 released into the atmosphere
when biodiesel is burned is recycled by growing plants, which are later
processed into fuel.
Biodiesel exhaust has a less harmful impact on human
health than petrodiesel. Pure biodiesel emissions have decreased levels
of polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbons (PAH) and nitrited PAH compounds that have been identified
as potential cancer causing compounds. Also, particulate matter, an emission
linked to asthma and other diseases, is reduced by about 47 percent,
and carbon monoxide, a poisonous gas, is reduced by about 48 percent.
Biodiesel
is registered as a fuel and fuel additive with the Environmental Protection
Agency and meets clean diesel standards established by the
California Air Resources Board. B100 (100 percent) biodiesel has been
designated as an alternative fuel by the Department of Energy and the
U.S. Department of Transportation.
Safer to manufacture and handle. Designed
properly and using the right processing technologies, the manufacturing
process for biodiesel is safe,
simple and straightforward. Biodiesel is also safer to transport and
use, primarily as a result of its higher flashpoint (i.e., the temperature
at which it will ignite).
Better for engines. Biodiesel has long been
used as a premium additive to petrodiesel to improve engine performance
and durability. Biodiesel
has a greater lubricity, reducing wear on engines and extending their
life, and acts as a mild solvent, releasing deposits accumulated on tank
walls and pipes from previous diesel fuel usage. The release of deposits
may end up in fuel filters initially, so fuel filters should be checked
more frequently at first.
Can use domestic feedstocks. Domestically produced
feedstocks can be used to produce biodiesel rather than relying on imported
feedstocks
like crude oil. Every gallon of biodiesel produced using domestic resources
reduces the $250 billion the U.S. pays other countries each year for
its crude oil.
Control over feedstock supplies. Biodiesel is made from
renewable resources that can be grown when and where needed. Biodiesel
can also use a variety
of feedstocks, such as soybean oil, rapeseed/canola oil, palm oil,
waste vegetable oil, and animal tallow.
Cheaper to manufacture. Biodiesel has
become competitive with petrodiesel , primarily as a result of favorable
government tax policy, higher petroleum
crude oil prices, increased petrodiesel refining costs, increased agricultural
productivity, and improvements in biodiesel processing technology.
Biodiesel
incentives and mandates. International and domestic federal
and state governments and agencies offer biodiesel incentives, blending,
and/or alternative fuel vehicle mandates. The U.S. federal government,
the Internal Revenue Service, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the
U.S. Department of Energy, the Environmental Protection agency, at least
31 states, and at least 16 foreign countries offer biodiesel incentives,
blending, and/or alternative fuel vehicle mandates.
Source: National Biodiesel
Board & Kreido Biofuels, Inc.
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