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Fill 'er Up: A Grist special series on biofuels
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The Doctor Is in ... Your TankAn interview with Seattle biodiesel distributor Dan Freeman07 Dec 2006
Dan Freeman.
Grist recently spoke to the good doctor -- who got his nickname years ago from his father, an underemployed Ph.D. at the time -- about waste reduction, the power of local energy sources, and why biofuels are like organic food. Eat your heart out, McDreamy. At first, I said no stinking way. I thought it was another thing that would perpetuate diesel, and since the diesel engine manufacturers were notorious for pointing fingers at each other and not doing anything to develop cleaner, more efficient engines and cleaner fuels, I wanted nothing to do with them. But Puget Sound Clean Cities was persistent and arranged a meeting with the Washington State Ferries. Washington State Ferries at the time was all for it. It was a way that they could lower their emissions and lower their operating costs. And I started selling biodiesel.
An introduction to Grist's special series on biofuels.
Can My Car Do That? Find out which cars can run on ethanol and biodiesel.
The Big Three. The numbers behind ethanol, cellulosic ethanol, and biodiesel in the U.S.
What About the Land? A look at the impacts of biofuels production, in the U.S. and the world.
Give Green, Go Yellow. How cash and corporate pressure pushed ethanol to the fore.
More articles on biofuels.
We need long-term, sustainable solutions. Biofuels should be made from agricultural byproducts. We're paying farmers not to farm, so they can certainly grow some biofuel feedstock. People say we can't go on with soybeans, and that's true -- we can't and we shouldn't. But through proper farming practices, such as crop rotation, agricultural byproducts, and utilizing our waste streams, we can dramatically reduce our dependence on foreign oil, clean up the environment, and enrich our economy.
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Also in Grist
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Small Potatoes, by Emily Gertz. Using grease and other goodies, small biodiesel producers are making a big difference.
Give Green, Go Yellow, by Tom Philpott. How cash and corporate pressure pushed ethanol to the fore.
Coming Soon to a Gas Tank Near You, by Sarah Kraybill Burkhalter. The what, where, and why of E85 ethanol.
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