What is Biodiesel?
Biodiesel is a form of diesel fuel made from vegetable oils, primarily corn oil and soy bean oil. Because the oils used are plant products, biodiesel is considered a natural and renewable fuel alternative. Currently, biodiesel is the only alternative fuel that’s been approved by the EPA. It burns clean and doesn’t contribute to either smog or global warming. It also doesn’t release cancer-causing compounds into the air like petroleum products can. But don’t think it’s a miracle cure to our nation’s fossil fuel addiction.
Biodiesel is more expensive than petroleum because of the manufacturing process used to produce it. An alcohol – methanol in most cases – has to be introduced into the vegetable oils to separate out the glycerine and methyl esters. The glycerine byproduct has many uses, including making soap, so producing biodiesel results in very little waste. However, large scale facilities for the production of biodiesel do not exist at present, so any cost analysis of biodiesel must include the cost of growing the necessary plant crops, processing them and shipping the fuel. However, any true cost analysis must also look not only at the financial costs of producing biodiesel fuel, but also at the environmental advantages that clean burning biodiesel offers.
Most people’s first introduction to biodiesel has been the “bootleg” form that’s produced by recycling used cooking oils, usually obtained from local restaurants by committed environmentalists. This home brew isn’t considered a legal form of biodiesel as there’s no way to monitor the production process to ensure the fuel meets quality standards.
One of the advantages of using biodiesel is that it can readily be used in most diesel engines without the need for any expensive or inconvenient modifications. Biodiesel actually helps clean diesel engines – you’ll actually need to change fuel filters frequently until all the petroleum sludge has been removed from the engine.
Biodiesel is currently available “neat,” or blended with petroleum fuel. B100 refers to 100 percent biodiesel fuel, while the most common mix is B20, a combination of 20 percent biodiesel by volume mixed with 80 percent petroleum by volume.
The National Biodiesel Board has run numerous tests on biodiesel to assess its performance, and after logging more than 50 million test miles – including street miles, off road miles and marine miles – the Board has found that biodiesel did as well as petroleum in all tested categories, including hauling, climbing, efficiency and power.
The feasibility of using biodiesel as the primary fuel source in any country is dependent on a number of factors. First, most consumer vehicles aren’t diesel, but run on gasoline instead. Second, there are the issues of mass production and distribution. These are considerable hurdles that would have to be overcome before biodiesel could be considered a wide scale, viable alternative.
However, in areas where processing plants are available, it may make sense to convert state or government diesel vehicles to biodiesel. In addition, as the US seeks to reduce its dependence on foreign oils, developing US-based biodiesel plants may become a more viable alternative.