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Fill 'er Up: A Grist special series on biofuels
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Plus, They Smell GoodThe top 10 reasons to give a hoot about biofuels15 Dec 2006
10. The future is now. Sure, it may feel like biofuels are some fringe thing, popping up in zany online eco-publications and only occasionally mentioned in the "real world." But biofuels are here, and they're mainstream. There are currently 4 million vehicles on the road in the U.S. capable of running on E85; every single gasoline-powered car in the nation can run on gasoline blended with up to 10 percent ethanol; and thousands of diesel commercial fleets run on biodiesel. You -- yes, you! -- may be able to bio-fill up right now. 9. The Hill is alive with the sound of biofuels. Politicians are talking about biofuels. Those in favor will be -- actually, already are -- hyping the technology big-time. And since they're paid to represent you, you wanna be able to let them know what you think, right? 8. The TV is also alive with the sound of biofuels. Live Green, Go Yellow already interrupts America's Next Top Model, and biofuel ads are only going to become more omnipresent as time goes on. Is there truth in advertising? It's worth investigating, instead of sitting slack-jawed on your sofa. 7. All your basics are belong to us. Think fuel has nothing to do with the environmental issues you care about? Think again. Biofuels production is tied up with food production, wildlife habitat, water scarcity, environmental justice, and plenty of other hippie tree-hugger causes. 6. Hip to it. Hot bands are touring on biofueled buses, and celebs and billionaires are getting into the game. Not that you would jump off a bridge if they did, but it's nice to be in vogue. 5. Whatever drives you. The U.S. transportation sector emitted nearly 2 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide in 2005. Getting yourself around is one of the key ways you make an eco-impact, and thinking about smarter ways to do it is just common sense. 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.
3. A reason for every care. Biofuel production is, at its purest, an attempt to wean the world's addiction to oil. Oil production, as you no doubt know, is connected to climate change, geopolitical instability, pollution, transportation infrastructure, health, socioeconomic disparity, war, and general quality of life. Among other things. 2. Oil and trouble. The bad news: Oil sucks. The 1. Grist says so. We've got our finger on the pulse of the green world, if we do say so ourselves, and we think this biofuels issue is darn important. So read up! You just might learn something. |
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You Want Me to Put What in My Tank?, by Kate Sheppard. The strangest biofuel sources you've never heard of.
Samba Lessons, by Tom Philpott, Gordon Feller. What Brazil can teach the U.S. about energy and ethanol.
Bio for All, by Kelly Hearn. A biodiesel entrepreneur in Argentina spreads seeds of wisdom.
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