Fuel Guru

Where the world comes for answers! UNBIASED and REAL information about fuel that promotes educated consumer driven strategies for our current and future marketplace

Friday, April 11, 2008

Bush on Ethanol


George Bush endorses ethanol as the answer to $4-5 a gallon gasoline and diesel fuel prices. Note the safety glasses...

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

New Ethanol Study Could Spell Relief for Industry

A recent report shows that the corn ethanol industry may have it's best opportunity yet to prove ethanol has it's merits. The industry was recently described as "one of the longest-running robberies of American taxpayers in the history of this country" by Robert Bryce, author of the new book Gusher of Lies:The Dangerous Delusions of Energy Independence.
According to the new report titled "Study shows ethanol may benefit memory," researchers propose that there is possibly a loose connection between a study of moderate doses of ethanol given to rats that seem to improve their memory, and the effects of ethanol on the human memory. With capacity creep (too much ethanol) ready to roll over the corn ethanol industry, and the astronomical cost of corn eating up ethanol refinery margins, this new report may be a saving grace for the ethanol industry. Hey, it may be a stretch-but with the right marketing...

Thursday, January 3, 2008

Grote Reber-Transportation Visionary


Grote Reber is known as a visionary and renowned pioneer who demonstrated with amateur radio astronomy that the invisible electromagnetic radio universe exists.

It's my interest in amateur radio that brought me to know Grote Reber's work. I find it synchronistic that his interest in transportation fuel parallels my own.

His advice is clear and simple. We need to drive smaller vehicles.

The photo came from the book, "The New Astronomy: Opening the Electromagnetic Window and Expanding Our View of Planet Earth."

Grote Reber radio astronomy story on Leading Edge Sciences

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Ethanol-Everyone is an Expert

Check out FuelGuru.blogspot.com for expert information on ethanol.

Sunday, September 2, 2007

Ethanol: Shock and Awe

It has been two years since the initial shock/spike to our transportation energy reality. The timing of hurricanes Rita/Katrina came as our fearless leader was signing the Energy Policy Act of 2005. This energy policy act can be compared to the foreign policy/military plan that came to be known as "shock and awe," and we all know how well that worked out.

For over twenty years, we had a homogeneous gasoline supply. The oil industry and consumers had not experienced dramatic changes in gasoline all at once and virtually over night like we experienced in 2006. The three main factors that have synergistically combined to produce a massive storm of instability in our transportation energy supply are:
- Phase-out of MTBE
- Desulphurization of gasoline
- Ethanol integration

Somehow we have been led to believe that this system of producing liquid petroleum transportation fuel that has been developed, perfected and controlled for over a century is just going to change in an instant.Let me be clear when I say that almost all bio/alternative transportation fuel initiatives that have come to light in the last two years amount to polishing the brass on the Titanic.

Aside from all the legitimate concerns we are now hearing about associated with producing ethanol, there is a much bigger concern - how do you put all this ethanol into gasoline. Because ethanol cannot be shipped via the method of choice for transportation fuels, pipelines, ethanol intergration is seriouly limited. More importantly and basically overlooked or not realized is the fact that adding ethanol to gasoline is very expensive. Furthermore, there is a limit of 10% ethanol that you can blend with gasoline using the current technique, splash-blending, at the terminal.

Clean burning efficient liquefied petroleum gasses (LPGs) such as butane need to be removed from gasoline before ethanol can be added, or these LPGs will leach out of the gasoline resulting in an increase of air pollutants. In some areas of the country known as conventional gasoline areas, there is a waiver to the controls on this type of air pollution when ethanol is blended, and preliminary reports indicate this waiver for ethanol blending is causing increased ground level smog air pollution. Removing these LPGs result in a staggering loss of 3-5% of available gasoline supply. This is known as refinery shrinkage.

As an expert in transportation fuels it is quite frustrating to see real issues such as ethanol integration not addressed. It seems virtually nobody in the industry has thought about how all the new ethanol production that is coming on line very soon is going to be physically added to gasoline. The ethanol industry, that so much of our time and resources have been devoted to, faces serious risk in the coming months and years. The resulting backlog and glut of ethanol is predicted to result in a dot com. like bust for many of the smaller ethanol producers that have bought into the fantasy of ethanol. Soon the shock and awe of our grossly misguided energy policy will begin to hit home when the American consumer realizes there is nobody at the helm with a thorough and realistic plan.

Here are a few important news stories that people should be aware of:

Biofuels Don't Have The Juice To Go The Distance
http://www.courant.com/news/opinion/commentary/hc-plcbiofuels09.artsep02,0,7391054.story

Bush's ethanol dreams make corn a hot commodity
http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/100840.html

(c) 2007 Jim Russo