We shouldn't switch to ethanol because ethanol is made from corn. People eat corn we only have so much corn. We would be competing with our cars for food.
2007-05-27 04:01:29
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answer #1
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answered by Abel H 5
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The answer is an emphatic "YES!"
Will it happen in our lifetime? Probably not.
We are very close, if not passed, the point in time where we've already consumed half of all the available crude oil discovered in the world, so without anymore being produced(it takes thousands of years) we will have no choice but to find alternative fuels.
Be aware the E85 hype going on right now-that stuff is only cost effective when petroleum prices are high, and what they don't advertise is the fact that the mileage on E85 is about 80% of that using 100% gas, which actually raises the cost of running the vehicle on E85.
Also, the amount of non-renewable energy used to produce the re-newable E85 (electricity for the manufactering process, fuel for the evaporation porcess etc) is more than the stuff puts out sos far from being the "Green, Clean" fuel alternative that its being hyped as being.
For a real education, access the Sundance channel is a real eye-opener. They have a series of programs dealing with exactly your question(s), and show just how Earth-friendly (or not) these lates-greatest bngs are.
I access those programs through my Brighthouse Cable system-the "Movies -On-Demand channel, which for MY area is channel 348.
Very interesting stuff-just how bad it really is and what to expect in the foreseable future is spelled out, and over the last couple fo yers, their predictions have been right on.
2007-05-27 04:01:56
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answer #2
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answered by ruskinflgator 5
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Solar powered Hydrogen generators on our houses Hydrogen Fuel stations still 30 years away. Using grain alcohol wastes energy to heat up the fermented mash to get the alcohol out. And the end product delivers 20% less mileage. Still Gasoline delivers the biggest bang for the buck. In America we need more modern refinerys. I want to see lot's more development of the Fuel cell that makes electricity directly.
2007-05-27 03:52:07
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answer #3
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answered by John Paul 7
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the US is many situations the actual length of Japan. American cities do have an excellent variety of public transportation, in manhattan the place I come from, a lot of people in no way study to force or very own a automobile. There are subways, buses, trains, ferries, taxis. Trains bypass from city to city, and from suburbs to city. no longer each and every physique lives interior the suburbs or perhaps they are frequently small cities, with buses on call and trams for the elderly. there are various used automobiles on the marketplace that are greater low priced than new automobiles, and gas, on an analogous time as we ***** approximately it, is greater low priced right here than distant places. So we aren't relatively as based on guy or woman transportation as some people think of. Its a convenience, yet there are approaches around it. We additionally at times trip with a lot of people in a automobile who artwork in one area.
2016-12-18 05:43:27
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answer #4
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answered by jeniffer 4
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gasoline is our long term answer.
It would cost a lot for people to go changing their cars.
People aren't going to dump cars they've had for so long to get a car that runs on alternate fuel sources
Recent surveys have shown that 87% of drivers don't care about environmental concernes with their cars and wouldn't dump their car for another car they have to pay for. (which is why the gov't is initiating tax relief for those who actually do it).
America is trying to; but it's people don't care (with the exception of environmentalists)
2007-05-27 04:40:19
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answer #5
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answered by thepenpal 4
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"ever"?
Sure.
Ever is a very very long time.
2007-05-27 03:45:46
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answer #6
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answered by Mr. KnowItAll 7
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