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yvonne shelley December 14th 06 11:06 AM

Astonishing Secrets Of The Biodiesel Maker In The World
 
Oil companies are pulling in record profits and the government says
they can't do anything about it.
Hurricanes have knocked the oil refineries down and you can feel it at
the pump.
And now you are stuck paying outrageous prices at the pump.
This reason is simple... It's what we all learned in Economics 101:
SUPPLY and DEMAND
The demand for oil is at an all time high. The United States, Europe,
and China are using more and more oil due to their expanding economies.
Unfortunately for you, this means you are FORCED to spend thousands of
dollars more every year on gas ...Until now.
The only ones who are winning are the big oil companies (and they are
DYING to get this site pulled down immediately).
Making biodiesel was an almost impossible task. But with these new
tactics, if you know how to scramble eggs, then you can learn how to
make biodiesel.
It's literally THAT easy. And this scares them TO DEATH (as it
should!).
The research has been done, so what's the verdict?
Biodiesel is currently the only alternative fuel that has successfully
completed the EPA required health effects test under the Clean Air Act.
The reason being is that biodiesel is not a threat to human health like
petroleum diesel.
In fact, studies have shown that the production and use of biodiesel
compared to petroleum diesel resulted in a 78.5% reduction in carbon
dioxide emissions. Think of what a difference that could make. Also the
sulfur oxides emissions is 8% lower in biodiesel compared to the sulfur
oxides in emissions from regular petro-diesel.
Essentially what this means is that biodiesel exhaust is much less
harmful to humans than the petroleum-based fuel.
It contains no aromatic compounds and also is much easier on the lungs.
The emission that particularly causes asthma and other lung disorders
is reduced by 47%.
So you can tell that that'll make a big difference in the quality of
air that we have in our world.
http://biodieseldu.blogspot.com/#


Keith December 14th 06 12:17 PM

Astonishing Secrets Of The Biodiesel Maker In The World
 
yea, but dino diesel is still much cheaper.


Tim December 14th 06 02:08 PM

Astonishing Secrets Of The Biodiesel Maker In The World
 
Why is that, Tom?

Not available in your area? or your State?



Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
On 14 Dec 2006 04:17:20 -0800, "Keith"
wrote:

yea, but dino diesel is still much cheaper.


I'd be willing to pay a .50¢ per gallon premium for bio diesel if I
could get it.

I can't.



Chuck Gould December 14th 06 04:30 PM

Astonishing Secrets Of The Biodiesel Maker In The World
 

Keith wrote:
yea, but dino diesel is still much cheaper.


Only if you measure "cost" strictly by the number of dollars you are
hauling out of your wallet when you fill up.

There are higher health, esthetic, and environmental "costs" associated
with the use of fossil fuels than with renewable resources.

I wouldn't want say that we have ever fought a "war for oil," but with
worldwide demand for crude oil steadily increasing and the US currently
importing the vast majority of the oil we need for daily consumption,
that's a scenario that looms as a distinct possibiilty in the
not-so-distant future. (Societies have fought wars over scarce
resources for thousands of years).

I'd hate to think that brave young men and women would ever have to die
so that our country could secure a political or territorial foothold in
one of the few remaining petroleum-rich nations. Transitioning to
biodiesel and other renewable resources will forestall the day when I
have to pump a couple of gallons of somebody's blood into my fuel
tanks. Would I spend another $2 a gallon, for the rest of my life if I
needed to, if I knew that my decision was "buying back" even a single
life of even a total stranger that would otherwise be sacrificed? I'd
like to think that I would. Would I spend another $3 a gallon, or $4,
if I knew that such an expenditure would prevent thousands, tens of
thousands, or hundreds of thousands of battlefield and collateral
deaths? Once again, I'd like to think that I would.

If we ever get to the point where we are spending 100's of billions of
dollars on some future war fought primarily to secure a political or
territorial foothold in an oil producing region, those costs would
eventually have to be paid back to the federal treasury- by the first
generation to come along with the nads to say "We will make sure that
our government
has adequate revenue to fund its spending" or the first generation to
find itself so disastrously in debt to recently-Communist China that it
has no choice. Taxes would need to be increased, (and that's a cash
cost to everybody), or existing revenues increasingly diverted to debt
service with a corresponding reduction in essential or useful services.

If we ever got into a situation where we were fighting wars for oil,
the defense costs would probably be several dollars per gallon of oil
imported. Something to think about when considering the "cost" of
diesel.

I burn B20 in my boat. That's the only biodiesel blend available around
here without schlepping the fuel down the dock in 5-gallon cans.
Because I'm unwilling to run back and forth from the dock to a
biodiesel producer with a couple of 5-gallon cans, I am in the same
situation as most other people- doing a lot less than I potentially
could to make the conversion to renewable resources. It's easier to
talk the talk than to walk the walk, isn't it? (I would burn B50, B80,
or maybe even B100 if it were available at the fuel dock).


Jean-Marc Delaplace December 14th 06 05:39 PM

Astonishing Secrets Of The Biodiesel Maker In The World
 
yvonne shelley a écrit :
In fact, studies have shown that the production and use of biodiesel
compared to petroleum diesel resulted in a 78.5% reduction in carbon
dioxide emissions. Think of what a difference that could make. Also the
sulfur oxides emissions is 8% lower in biodiesel compared to the sulfur
oxides in emissions from regular petro-diesel.


I am afraid that it must rather be the other way round, 78% for sulphur
oxydes and 8% for CO2, for the carbon contents of any oil is roughly the
same, whereas the sulphur contents varies greatly according to the
source. Thus as far as greenhouse effect, the difference is not that
much but for sure it is a real improvement as far as acid rains and
respiratory tract health.

Jean-Marc


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