A
flexible-fuel vehicle (FFV) or
dual-fuel
vehicle (
colloquially called a
flex-fuel vehicle) is an
alternative fuel vehicle with an
internal combustion
engine designed to run on more than one
fuel, usually
gasoline blended
with either
ethanol or
methanol fuel, and both fuels are stored in
the same common tank. Flex-fuel engines are capable of burning any
proportion of the resulting blend in the
combustion chamber as
fuel injection and
spark timing are adjusted automatically
according to the actual blend detected by electronic sensors.
Flex-fuel vehicles are distinguished from
bi-fuel vehicles, where two fuels are stored
in separate tanks and the engine runs on one fuel at a time, for
example,
compressed natural
gas (CNG),
liquefied petroleum gas
(LPG), or
hydrogen.
The most
common commercially available FFV in the market is the ethanol
flexible-fuel vehicle, with more than 17 million automobiles and light
duty trucks on the roads around the world by early 2009, and
concentrated in four markets, Brazil
(8.2
million), the United
States
(almost 8 million), Canada
(600,000),
and Europe, led by Sweden
(311,122). In addition to flex-fuel vehicles running
with ethanol, in Europe and the US, mainly in California
, there have been successful test programs with
methanol flex-fuel vehicles, known as
M85 flex-fuel vehicles. There have been also successful
tests using
P-series fuels with E85
flex fuel vehicles, but as of June 2008, this fuel is not yet
available to the general public. These successful tests with
P-series fuels were conducted on
Ford
Taurus and
Dodge Caravan
flexible-fuel vehicles.
Though technology exists to allow ethanol FFVs to run on any
mixture of gasoline and ethanol, from pure gasoline up to 100%
ethanol (
E100),
North American and European flex-fuel vehicles are optimized to run
on a maximum blend of 15% gasoline with 85%
anhydrous ethanol (called
E85
fuel). This limit in the ethanol content is set to reduce ethanol
emissions at low temperatures and to avoid cold starting problems
during cold weather, at temperatures lower than 11
°C (52
°F).
The alcohol content is reduced during the winter in regions where
temperatures fall below to a winter blend of
E70 in the U.S. or to
E75 in Sweden
from November until March. Brazilian flex fuel vehicles are
optimized to run on any mix of
E20-E25 gasoline and
up to 100%
hydrous ethanol fuel (E100). The
Brazilian flex vehicles are built-in with a small gasoline
reservoir for cold starting the engine when temperatures drop below
. An improved flex motor generation was launched in 2009 which
eliminated the need for the secondary gas tank.
Terminology
As ethanol FFVs became commercially available during the late
1990s, the common use of the term "flexible-fuel vehicle" became
synonymous with ethanol FFVs. In the United States flex-fuel
vehicles are also known as "E85 vehicles". In Brazil, the FFVs are
popularly known as "total flex" or simply "flex" cars. In Europe,
FFVs are also known as "flexifuel" vehicles. Automakers,
particularly in Brazil and the European market, use badging in
their FFV models with the some variant of the word "flex", such as
Volvo Flexifuel, or
Volkswagen Total Flex, or
Chevrolet FlexPower or
Renault Hi-Flex, and
Ford sells its
Focus model in Europe as
Flexifuel and as
Flex in Brazil. In the US, only
newer FFV models feature a yellow gas cap with the label
"E85/Gasoline" written on the top of the cap to differentiate E85s
from gasoline only models, and just recently,
GM introduced badging with the text
"Flexfuel/E85 Ethanol".
Flexible-fuel vehicles (FFVs) are based on dual-fuel systems that
supply both fuels into the combustion chamber at the same time in
various calibrated proportions. The most common fuels used by FFVs
today are unleaded gasoline and ethanol fuel. Ethanol FFVs can run
on pure gasoline, pure ethanol (E100) or any combination of both.
Methanol has also been blended with gasoline in flex-fuel vehicles
known as
M85
FFVs, but their use has been limited mainly to demonstration
projects and small government fleets, particularly in California.
- Bi-fuel vehicles. The term
flexible-fuel vehicles is sometimes used to include other alternative fuel vehicles that can
run with compressed natural
gas (CNG), liquefied
petroleum gas (LPG; also known as autogas), or hydrogen. However, all these vehicles
actually are bi-fuel and not flexible-fuel vehicles, because they
have engines that store the other fuel in a separate tank, and the
engine runs on one fuel at a time. Bi-fuel vehicles have the
capability to switch back and forth from gasoline to the other
fuel, manually or automatically. The most common available fuel in the
market for bi-fuel cars is natural gas (CNG), and by 2008 there
were 9,6 million natural gas vehicles, led by Pakistan
(2.0
million), Argentina
(1.7 million), and Brazil (1.6 million).
Natural gas vehicles are a popular choice as taxicabs in the main cities of Argentina and Brazil.
Normally, standard gasoline vehicles are retrofitted in specialized
shops, which involve installing the gas cylinder in the trunk and
the CNG injection system and electronics.
- Multifuel vehicles are capable of
operating with more than two fuels. In 2004 GM do Brasil introduced the Chevrolet Astra 2.0 with a "MultiPower"
engine built on flex fuel technology developed by Bosch of Brazil, and capable of using CNG,
ethanol and gasoline (E20-E25 blend) as fuel. This automobile was
aimed at the taxicab market and the switch among fuels is done
manually. In 2006 Fiat
introduced
the Fiat Siena Tetra fuel, a four-fuel
car developed under Magneti Marelli
of Fiat Brazil. This automobile can run as a flex-fuel on
100% ethanol (E100); or on E-20 to E25, Brazil's normal ethanol
gasoline blend; on pure gasoline (though no longer available in
Brazil since 1993, it is still used in neighboring countries); or
just on natural gas. The Siena Tetrafuel was engineered to switch
from any gasoline-ethanol blend to CNG automatically, depending on
the power required by road conditions. Another existing option is
to retrofit an ethanol flexible-fuel
vehicle to add a natural gas tank and the corresponding injection
system. This option is popular among taxicab owners
in São
Paulo
and Rio de Janeiro
, Brazil, allowing users to choose among three fuels
(E25, E100 and CNG) according to current market prices at the
pump. Vehicles with this adaptation are known in Brazil as
"tri-fuel" cars.
History
The first commercial flexible fuel vehicle was the
Ford Model T, produced from 1908 through 1927.
It was fitted with a
carburetor with
adjustable jetting, allowing use of gasoline or ethanol, or a
combination of both. Other car manufactures also provided engines
for ethanol fuel use.
Henry Ford
continued to advocate for ethanol as fuel even during the
prohibition. However,
cheaper oil caused gasoline to prevail, until the
1973 oil crisis resulted in gasoline
shortages and awareness on the dangers of oil dependence. This
crisis opened a new opportunity for ethanol and other
alternative fuels, such as
methanol, gaseous fuels such as
CNG and
LPG, and also
hydrogen. Ethanol, methanol and natural gas
CNG were the three alternative fuels that received more attention
for
research and
development, and government support.
Since 1975, and as a response to the shock caused by the first oil
crisis, the Brazilian government implemented the National Alcohol
Program -
Pró-Álcool- ( ), a
nationwide program financed by the government to phase out
automotive fuels derived from
fossil
fuels in favor of ethanol made from
sugar
cane. It began with a low blend of
anhydrous alcohol with regular gasoline in 1976,
and since July 2007 the mandatory blend is 25% of alcohol or
gasohol E25.
In 1979,
and as a response to the second oil
crisis, the first vehicle capable of running with pure hydrous ethanol (E100) was launched to the market,
the Fiat 147, after testing with several
prototypes developed by Fiat
, Volkswagen, GM and Ford. The Brazilian government
provided three important initial drivers for the ethanol industry:
guaranteed purchases by the state-owned oil company
Petrobras, low-interest loans for agro-industrial
ethanol firms, and fixed gasoline and ethanol prices. After
reaching more than 4 million cars and light trucks running on pure
ethanol by the late 1980s, the use of E100-only vehicles sharply
declined after increases in sugar prices produced shortages of
ethanol fuel.
After extensive research that began in the 90s, a second push took
place in March 2003, when the Brazilian subsidiary of Volkswagen
launched to the market the first full flexible-fuel car, the
Gol 1.6 Total Flex. Several months
later was followed by other Brazilian automakers, and by 2009
General Motors, Fiat, Ford,
Peugeot,
Renault, Volkswagen,
Honda,
Mitsubishi,
Toyota,
Citröen and
Nissan were producing popular models of flex
cars and light trucks. The adoption of ethanol flex fuel vehicles
was so successful, that production of flex cars went from almost 40
thousand in 2003 to 1.7 million in 2007. This rapid adoption of the
flex technology was facilitated by the fuel distribution
infrastructure already in place, as around 27,000 filling stations
countrywide were available by 1997 with at least one ethanol pump,
a heritage of the
Pró-Álcool program.
In the United States, initial support to develop alternative fuels
by the government was also a response to the first oil crisis, and
some time later, as a goal to improve air quality. Also, liquid
fuels were preferred over gaseous fuels not only because they have
a better volumetric energy density but also because they were the
most compatible fuels with existing distribution systems and
engines, thus avoiding a big departure from the existing
technologies and taking advantage of the vehicle and the refueling
infrastructure. California led the search of sustainable
alternatives with interest focused in methanol. Ford Motor Company
and other automakers responded to California's request for vehicles
that run on methanol. In 1981, Ford delivered 40 dedicated methanol
fuel (M100)
Escorts to
Los Angeles County, but only four
refueling stations were installed. The biggest challenge in the
development of alcohol vehicle technology was getting all of the
fuel system materials compatible with the higher chemical
reactivity of the fuel. Methanol was even more of a challenge than
ethanol but, fortunately, much of the early experience gained with
ethanol vehicle production in Brazil was transferable to methanol.
The success of this small experimental fleet of M100s led
California to request more of these vehicles, mainly for government
fleets.
In
1983, Ford built 582 M100 vehicles; 501 went to California, and the
remaining to New
Zealand
, Sweden
, Norway
, United Kingdom
, and Canada
.
As an answer to the lack of refueling infrastructure, Ford began
development of a flexible-fuel vehicle in 1982, and between 1985
and 1992, 705 experimental FFVs were built and delivered to
California and Canada, including the 1.6L Ford Escort, the 3.0L
Taurus, and the 5.0L
LTD Crown Victoria. These vehicles
could operate on either gasoline or methanol with only one fuel
system. Legislation was passed to encourage the US auto industry to
begin production, which started in 1993 for the M85 FFVs at Ford.
In 1996, a new FFV Ford Taurus was developed, with models fully
capable of running on either methanol or ethanol blended with
gasoline. This ethanol version of the Taurus became the first
commercial production of an E85 FFV. The momentum of the FFV
production programs at the American car companies continued,
although by the end of the 1990s, the emphasis shifted to the FFV
E85 version, as it is today. Ethanol was preferred over methanol
because there is a large support from the farming community, and
thanks to the government's incentive programs and corn-based
ethanol subsidies. Sweden also tested both the M85 and the E85
flexifuel vehicles, but due to agriculture policy, in the end
emphasis was given to the ethanol flexifuel vehicles. Support for
ethanol also comes from the fact that it is a
biomass fuel, which addresses
climate change concerns and
greenhouse gas emissions, though these
benefits are now highly debated depending on the feedstock used for
ethanol production.
The demand for ethanol fuel produced from
field corn in the United States was stimulated by
the discovery in the late 90s that
methyl tertiary butyl ether , an
oxygenate additive in gasoline, was
contaminating groundwater. Due to the risks of widespread and
costly litigation, and because MTBE use in gasoline was banned in
almost 20 states by 2006, the substitution of MTBE opened a new
market for ethanol fuel. This demand shift for ethanol as an
oxygenate additive took place at a time when
oil prices were already
significantly rising. By 2006, about 50 percent of the gasoline
used in the U.S. contains ethanol at different proportions, and
ethanol production grew so fast that the US became the world's
first ethanol producer,
overtaking
Brazil in 2005. This shift also contributed to a sharp increase in
the production and sale of E85 flex vehicles since 2002.
Flexible-fuel vehicles by country
Brazil
After the
1973 oil crisis, the
Brazilian government made mandatory the use of
ethanol blends with gasoline,
and 100% ethanol powered cars (
E100 only) were launched
to the market in 1979, after testing with several prototypes
developed by four carmakers. Brazilian carmakers modified gasoline
engines to support ethanol characteristics and changes included
compression ratio, amount of fuel
injected, replacement of materials that would get corroded by the
contact with ethanol, use of colder
spark
plugs suitable for dissipating heat due to higher flame
temperatures, and an auxiliary cold-start system that injects
gasoline from a small tank in the engine compartment to help
starting when cold. Flexible-fuel technology started being
developed only by the end of the 1990s by Brazilian engineers. The
Brazilian flexible fuel car is built with an ethanol-ready engine
and one fuel tank for both fuels. The small gasoline reservoir for
starting the engine with pure ethanol in cold weather, used in
earlier ethanol-only vehicles, was kept in the first generation of
Brazilian flexible-fuel cars, mainly for users of the central and
southern regions, where winter temperatures normally drop below .
An improved flex motor generation that will be launched in 2009
will eliminate the need for this secondary gas reservoir tank.
A key innovation in the Brazilian flex technology was avoiding the
need for an additional dedicated sensor to monitor the
ethanol-gasoline mix, which made the first American
M85 flex fuel vehicles too expensive. This was
accomplished through the
lambda probe,
used to measure the quality of combustion in conventional engines,
is also required to tell the
engine
control unit (ECU) which blend of gasoline and alcohol is being
burned. This task is accomplished automatically through software
developed by Brazilian engineers, called "
Software Fuel Sensor" (SFS), fed with
data from the standard sensors already built-in the vehicle.
The
technology was developed by the Brazilian subsidiary of Bosch in 1994, but was further improved
and commercially implemented in 2003 by the Italian subsidiary of
Magneti Marelli, located in Hortolândia
, São Paulo
. A similar fuel injection technology was
developed by the Brazilian subsidiary of Delphi Automotive Systems, and it is
called "Multifuel", based on
research conducted at its facility in Piracicaba
, São Paulo. This technology allows the
controller to regulate the amount of fuel injected and spark time,
as fuel flow needs to be decreased and also self-combustion needs
to be avoided when gasoline is used because ethanol engines have
compression ratio around 12:1, too high for gasoline.
Ethanol Flex Light Vehicles Manufacturing in Brazil
2003-2009(2)
| Year |
Flex
Autos
Produced
|
Flex
Light
trucks
Produced
|
Total
Light
Vehicles(1)
Produced
(including
exports)
|
Flex
vehicles
as %
Total light
vehicles(1)
|
|
| 2003 |
39,853 |
9,411 |
1,721,841 |
2.9 |
| 2004 |
282,706 |
49,801 |
2,181,131 |
15.2 |
| 2005 |
776,164 |
81,735 |
2,377,453 |
36.1 |
| 2006 |
1,249,062 |
142,574 |
2,471,224 |
56.3 |
| 2007 |
1,719,667 |
217,186 |
2,801,011 |
69.1 |
| 2008 |
1,992,217 |
258,707 |
3,009,034 |
74.8 |
| Total
2003-2008 |
6,059,669 |
759,414 |
14,561,694 |
46.8 |
| July 2009(2) |
1,268,191 |
162,940 |
1,670,302 |
85.7 |
Source: ANFAVEA 2009, 2008, and years 2003
to 2007.
Note: (1) Total light vehicles includes autos and light trucks
fueled with
gasoline, pure ethanol, flex, and diesel.
(2) Production up to July 2009.
Cumulative 2003-2009 is 8,250,214 flex vehicles |
Brazilian flex cars are capable of running on just
hydrated ethanol (E100), or just on a blend of
gasoline with 20 to 25%
anhydrous ethanol,
or on any arbitrary combination of both fuels. Pure gasoline is no
longer sold in the country because these high ethanol blends are
mandatory since 1993. Therefore, all Brazilian automakers have
optimized flex vehicles to run with gasoline blends from E20 to
E25, and with a few exceptions, these FFVs are unable to run
smoothly with pure gasoline which causes
engine knocking, as vehicles traveling to
neighboring
South American countries
have demonstrated. Only two models are specifically built with a
flex-fuel engine optimized to operate also with pure gasoline (E0),
the
Renault Clio Hi-Flex and the
Fiat Siena Tetrafuel.
The flexibility of Brazilian FFVs empowers the consumers to choose
the fuel depending on current market prices. As ethanol
fuel economy is lower than
gasoline because of ethanol's energy content is close to 34% less
per unit volume than gasoline, flex cars running on ethanol get a
lower mileage than when running on pure gasoline. However, this
effect is partially offset by the usually lower price per liter of
ethanol fuel. As a
rule of thumb,
Brazilian consumers are frequently advised by the media to use more
alcohol than gasoline in their mix only when ethanol prices are 30%
lower or more than gasoline, as ethanol price fluctuates heavily
depending on the result of seasonal sugar cane harvests.
In March 2003
Volkswagen do
Brasil launched in the market the
Gol 1.6 Total Flex, the first commercial
flexible fuel vehicle capable of running on any blend of gasoline
and ethanol.
GM do Brasil followed two
months later with the
Chevrolet
Corsa 1.8 Flexpower, using an engine developed by a
joint-venture with Fiat called PowerTrain. By 2009, popular
manufacturers that build flexible fuel vehicles are GM (Chevrolet),
Fiat, Ford, Peugeot, Renault, Volkswagen, Honda, Mitsubishi,
Toyota, Citröen, and Nissan. Flexible fuel vehicles were 22% of the
new car sales in 2004, 73% in 2005, 87.6% in July 2008, and reached
a record 94% in August 2009. As of July 2009, the fleet of flex
automobiles and light commercial vehicles had reached 8.25 million
vehicles, representing 14.7% of Brazil's motor vehicle fleet and
21.7% of all registered light vehicles.
The rapid success of flex vehicles was made possible by the
existence of 33,000 filling stations with at least one ethanol pump
available by 2006, a heritage of the early
Pró-Álcool
ethanol program. These facts, together with the mandatory use of
E25 blend of gasoline
throughout the country, allowed Brazil in 2008 to achieve more than
50% of fuel consumption in the gasoline market from sugar
cane-based ethanol.
According to two separate research studies
conducted in 2009, 65% of the flex-fuel registered vehicles
regularly use ethanol fuel at the national level, and by 93% of
flex car owners in São Paulo
, the main ethanol producer state where local taxes
are lower, and prices at the pump are more competitive than
gasoline.
Latest developments
The latest innovation within the Brazilian flexible-fuel
technology, is the development of flex-fuel
motorcycles. In 2007 Magneti Marelli presented
the first motorcycle with flex technology, adapted on a
Kasinski Seta 125, and based on the
Software Fuel Sensor (SFS) the firm
developed for flex-fuel cars in Brazil. Delphi Automotive Systems
also presented in 2007 its
Multifuel injection technology for
motorcycles. Besides the flexibility in the choice of fuels, a main
objective of the fuel-flex motorcycles is to reduce CO
2
emissions by 20 percent, and savings in fuel consumption in the
order of 5% to 10% are expected.
AME Amazonas Motocicletas
announced that sales of its motorcycle
AME GA
(G stands for gasoline and A for alcohol) will begin in 2009. This
model is based on the fuel injection technology developed by Delphi
Automotive Systems do Brasil.
The first flex motorcycle was launched by
Honda in March 2009. Produced by its Brazilian
subsidiary Moto Honda da Amazônia, the
CG 150 Titan Mix is sold for around
US$2,700. Because the motorcycle does not have a secondary gas tank
for a cold start like the Brazilian flex cars do, the tank must
have at least 20% of gasoline to avoid start up problems at
temperatures below . The motorcycle’s panel includes a gauge to
warn the driver about the actual ethanol-gasoline mix in the
storage tank. During the first six months after its market launch
the CG 150 Titan Mix sold 102,782 motorcycles, capturing a 10.1%
market share, and ranking fourth in sales of new motorcycles in the
Brazilian market in 2009.
The Brazilian subsidiaries of Magneti Marelli, Delphi and Bosch
have developed and announced the introduction in 2009 of a new flex
engine generation that eliminates the need for the secondary
gasoline tank by warming the ethanol fuel during starting, and
allowing flex vehicles to do a normal cold start at temperatures as
low as , the lowest temperature expected anywhere in the Brazilian
territory. Another improvement is the reduction of fuel consumption
and tailpipe emissions, between 10% to 15% as compared to flex
motors sold in 2008. In March 2009
Volkswagen do Brasil launched the
Polo E-Flex, the first flex fuel
model without an auxiliary tank for cold start. The Flex Start
system used by the Polo was developed by Bosch.
Brazilian flex engines are being designed with higher
compression ratios, taking advantage of
the higher ethanol blends and maximizing the benefits of the higher
oxygen content of ethanol, resulting in lower emissions and
improving fuel efficiency. The following table shows the evolution
and improvement of the different generations of flex engines
developed in Brazil.
Comparison of performance of several generations of Brazilian
flex-fuel engines
(Percentages show change in performance as compared with using
gasoline) |
| Year |
Engine
compression ratio |
Engine
power |
Engine
torque |
Fuel efficiency
improvement |
Gasoline injection
cold start system |
| 2003 |
9.0:1 to 10.5:1 |
+3% |
+2% |
-25 to -35% |
Yes |
| 2006 |
11.0:1 to 12.5:1 |
+7% |
+5% |
-25 to -30% |
Yes |
| 2008 |
12.0:1 to 13.5:1 |
+9% |
+7% |
-20 to -25% |
No |
| Source: Joseph (2007) in The Royal Society (2008), "Sustainable
biofuels: prospects and challenges". |
Europe
Sweden
Flexi-fuel fleet in Sweden
Cars registered by year (2001-2009) |
| Year |
Registered
fleet |
Year |
Registered
fleet |
| 2001 |
717
|
2006 |
25,868
|
| 2002 |
1,926
|
2007 |
35,499
|
| 2003 |
1,669
|
2008 |
57,628
|
| 2004 |
1,074
|
2009(1) |
169,509
|
| 2005 |
17,232
|
Total |
311,122
|
| Source: BioAlcohol Fuel Foundation
(BAFF). (1) As of August 2009. |
Flexible-fuel vehicles were introduced in Sweden as a demonstration
test in 1994, when three
Ford Taurus
were imported to show the technology existed.
Because of the
existing interest, a project was started in 1995 with 50 Ford
Taurus E85 flexifuel in different parts of Sweden: Umea
, Örnsköldsvik
, Härnösand
, Stockholm
, Karlstad
, Linköping
, and Växjö
. From
1997 to 1998 an additional 300 Taurus were imported, and the number
of E85 fueling grew to 40.
Then in 1998 the city of Stockholm
placed an order for 2,000 of FFVs for any car
manufacturer willing to produce them. The objective was to
jump-start the FFV industry in Sweden. The two domestic car makers
Volvo Group and
Saab AB
refused to participate arguing there were not in place any ethanol
filling stations. However,
Ford Motor
Company took the offer and began importing the flexifuel
version of its
Focus
model, delivering the first cars in 2001, and selling more than
15,000 FFV Focus by 2005, then representing an 80% market share of
the flexifuel market.
In 2005 both Volvo and Saab introduced to the Sweden market their
flexifuel models. Saab began selling its
9-5
2.0 Biopower, joined in 2006 by its 9-5 2.3 Biopower. Volvo
introduced its
S40 and
V50 with flexible-fuel engines, joined in late
2006 by the new
C30. All Volvo models were
initially restricted to the Sweden market, until 2007, when these
three models were launched in eight new European markets. In 2007,
Saab also started selling a BioPower version of its popular
Saab 9-3 line. In 2008 the Saab-derived
Cadillac BLS was introduced with E85
compatible engines, and Volvo launched the
V70 with a 2.5-litre turbocharged Flexifuel
engine.
All flexible-fuel vehicles in Sweden use an E75 winter blend
instead of E85 to avoid engine starting problems during cold
weather. This blend was introduced since the winter 2006-07 and E75
is used from November until March. For temperature below E85 flex
vehicles require an engine block heater. The use of this device is
also recommended for gasoline vehicles when temperatures drop below
. Another option when extreme cold weather is expected is to add
more pure gasoline in the tank, thus reducing the ethanol content
below the E75 winter blend, or simply not to use E85 during extreme
low temperature spells.
Sweden has achieved the largest E85 flexible-fuel vehicle fleet in
Europe, with a sharp growth from 717 vehicles in 2001 to 311,122 by
August 2009. The recent and accelerated growth of the Swedish fleet
of E85 flexifuel vehicles, as they are popularly known, is the
result of the National Climate Policy in Global Cooperation Bill
passed in 2005, which not only ratified the
Kyoto Protocol but also sought to meet the
2003 EU Biofuels Directive regarding targets for use of
biofuels, and also let to the 2006
government's commitment to eliminate oil imports by 2020.
In order to achieve these goals several government incentives were
implemented. Ethanol, as the other biofuels, was exempted of both,
the CO
2 and energy taxes until 2009, resulting in a 30%
price reduction at the pump of E85 fuel over gasoline. Furthermore,
other demand side incentives for flexifuel vehicle owners include a
USD 1,800 bonus to buyers of FFVs, exemption
from the
Stockholm congestion
tax, up to 20% discount on auto insurance, free parking spaces
in most of the largest cities, owner annual registration taxes, and
a 20% tax reduction for flexifuel company cars. Also, a part of the
program, the Swedish Government ruled that 25% of their vehicle
purchases (excluding police, fire and ambulance vehicles) must be
alternative fuel vehicles. By the first months of 2008, this
package of incentives resulted in sales of flexible-fuel cars
representing 25% of new car sales.
On the supply side, since 2005 the gasoline fuelling stations
selling more than 3 million liters of fuel a year are required to
sell at least one type of biofuel, resulting in more than 1,200 gas
stations selling E85 by August 2008. Despite all the sharp growth
of E85 flexifuel cars, by 2007 they represented just 2% of the 4
million Swedish vehicle fleet. In addition, this law also mandated
all new filling stations to offer alternative fuels, and stations
with an annual volume of more than 1 million liters are required to
have an alternative fuel pump by December 2009. Therefore, the
number of E85 pumps is expected to reach by 2009 nearly 60% of
Sweden’s 4,000 filling stations.
The Swedish-made
Koenigsegg CCXR, a
limited edition and version of the
CCX, is currently the fastest and most
powerful flexible fuel vehicle with its twin-
supercharged V8 producing
1018 hp when running on biofuel, as compared to 806 hp on
91
octane US unleaded gasoline.
Other European countries
Bioethanol E85 stations
|
| Country |
Number
Stations
|
As of
(date)
|
Stat/106
persons
|
|
1,455 |
2009 |
131.26 |
|
308 |
2009 |
3.27 |
|
270 |
2009 |
2.67 |
|
62 |
2009 |
5.27 |
|
31 |
2009 |
5.84 |
|
29 |
2009 |
0.30 |
|
21 |
2008 |
0.34 |
|
19 |
2009 |
1.3 |
|
19 |
2009 |
2.30 |
|
16 |
2009 |
- |
|
15 |
2009 |
0.18 |
Note: Only countries with ten or more E85
stations are included.
For other countries search here |
|
Flexifuel
vehicles are sold in 18 European countries, including Austria
, Belgium
, Czech
Republic
, Denmark
, Estonia
, France
, Germany
, Hungary
, Ireland
, Italy
, the
Netherlands
, Norway
, Poland
, Spain
, Sweden
, Switzerland
, and the United Kingdom
. Ford, Volvo and Saab are the main
automakers offering flexifuel autos in the region.
France
Biofuel cars in general get strong tax
incentives in France, including a 0 or 50% reduction on the tax on
new vehicles, and a 40% reduction on CO
2 tax for new
cars. For company cars there is a corporate car tax free for 2
years and a recovery of 80% of the
value
added tax (VAT) on E85 vehicles. Also, E85 fuel price is set
significantly lower than diesel or gasoline, resulting in E85 at
€ 0.80, diesel at € 1.15, and gasoline at €
1.30 per
liter, as of April 2007. By May 2008,
France had 211 pumps selling E85, even though the government made
plans for the installation of up to 500 E85 pumps by year end 2007.
French automakers
Renault and
PSA (Citroen & Peugeot)
announced they will start selling FFV cars beginning in the summer
2007.
Germany
Biofuel emphasis in Germany is on
biodiesel, and no specific incentives have been
granted for E85 flex-fuel cars, however there is complete exemption
of taxes on all biofuels while there is a normal tax of € 0.65 per
liter of petroleum fuels. The distribution of E85 began in 2005,
and with 219 stations as of September 2008, Germany ranks second
after Sweden with the most E85 fueling stations in the
EU.As of January 2008 retail prices of E85 was € 0.95 per
liter, and gasoline was priced at € 1.37 per liter (for gasoline
RON 95), then providing enough margin to compensate for ethanol's
lower fuel economy.Ford has offered the Ford Focus since August
2005 in Germany. Ford is about to offer also the
Mondeo and other models as FFV versions between
2008 and 2010. The Saab 9-5 and Saab 9-3 Biopower, the
Peugeot 308 Bioflex, the
Citroen C4 Bioflex, the
Audi
A5, two models of the
Cadillac BLS,
and five Volvo models are also available in the German market by
2008.
Ireland
Ireland is the third best seller European market of E85 flex-fuel
vehicles, after Sweden and France. Bioethanol (E85) in Ireland is
made from
whey, a waste product of
cheese manufacturing. The Irish government
established several incentives, including a 50% discount in vehicle
registration taxes (VRT), which can account for more than one third
of the retail price of a new car in Ireland (around € 6,500). The
bioethanol element of the E85 fuel is excise-free for fuel
companies, allowing retail prices to be low enough to offset the 25
per cent cut in fuel economy that E-85 cars offer, due to ethanol's
lower energy content than gasoline. Also, the value added tax (VAT)
on the fuel can also be claimed back. E-85 fuel is available across
the country in more than 20 of
Maxol service
stations. In October 2005, the 1.8 Ford Focus FFV became the first
flexible-fuel vehicle to be commercially sold in Ireland. Later
Ford launched the
C-max and the Mondeo
flexifuel models. Saab and Volvo also have E85 models available.
Spain
The first flexifuel vehicles were introduced in Spain by late 2007,
with the acquisition of 80 cars for use in the Spaniard official
government fleet.
At that time the country had only three gas
stations selling E85, making necessary
to deploy an official E85 fueling station in Madrid
to attend
these vehicles. Despite the introduction in the Spaniard
market of several flexifuel models, by the end of 2008 still
persists the problems of adequate E85 fueling infrastructure, as
only 10 gas stations were selling E85 fuel to the public in the
entire country.
United Kingdom
The UK government established several incentives for E85 flex-fuel
vehicles. These include a fuel duty rebate on E85 fuel of 20
p per liter, until 2010; a
£ 10 to 15 reduction in the
vehicle excise duty (VED); and a 2%
annual company car tax discount for flex-fuel cars. Despite the
small number of E85 pump stations available, limited to the
Morrisons supermarket chain stations, most
automakers offer the same models in the UK that are available in
the European market. In 2005 the Ford Focus Flexi-Fuel became the
first flexible-fuel car sold in the UK, though E85 pumps opened
until 2006. Volvo now offers its flexifuel models
S80,
S40,
C30,
V50 and
V70. Other models available in the UK are the Ford
C-Max Flexi-Fuel, and the Saab models
9-5
and
9-3 Flex-Fuel Biopower, and the new
Saab Aero X BioPower
E100 bioethanol.
United States
E85 FFVs Manufactured and in Use
in the United States 1998-2008*
| Year |
Light-Duty
E85 FFVs
produced
|
Light-Duty
E85 FFVs
increase**
|
Total fleet
E85 FFVs
in use
|
| 1998 |
261,165 |
171,422 |
171,422 |
| 1999 |
426,724 |
357,450 |
528,872 |
| 2000 |
600,832 |
528,315 |
1,057,187 |
| 2001 |
581,774 |
533,458 |
1,590,645 |
| 2002 |
834,976 |
793,575 |
2,384,220 |
| 2003 |
859,261 |
837,357 |
3,221,577 |
| 2004 |
674,678 |
670,794 |
3,892,371 |
| 2005 |
735,693 |
735,693 |
4,628,064 |
| 2006 |
866,194 |
866,194 |
5,494,258 |
| 2007 |
974,095 |
974,095 |
6,468,353 |
| August 2008* |
793,354* |
793,354* |
7,289,908 |
Note: * Data until August 2008.
** Net increase is new FFVs
manufactured discounted by the survival rate.
Source: National
Renewable Energy Laboratory
|
By early 2009 there are almost 8 million E85 flex fuel vehicles
running on the US roads, up from almost 5 million in 2005. The E85
blend is used in gasoline engines modified to accept such higher
concentrations of ethanol, and the fuel injection is regulated
through a dedicated sensor, which automatically detects the amount
of ethanol in the fuel, allowing to adjust both fuel injection and
spark timing accordingly to the actual blend available in the
vehicle's tank. The American E85 flex fuel vehicle was developed to
run on any mixture of unleaded gasoline and ethanol, anywhere from
0% to 85% ethanol by volume. Both fuels are mixed in the same tank,
and E85 is sold already blended. In order to reduce ethanol
evaporative emissions and to avoid problems starting the engine
during cold weather, the maximum blend of ethanol was set to 85%.
There is also a seasonal reduction of the ethanol content to E70
(called winter E85 blend) in very cold regions, where temperatures
fall below during the winter.
In Wyoming
for example, E70 is sold as E85 from October to
May.
E85 flex-fuel vehicles are becoming increasingly common in the
Midwest, where
corn is
a major
crop and is the primary
feedstock for
ethanol fuel production.
Also the
US government has been using
flex-fuel vehicles for many years. By 2008 almost any type of
automobile and
light duty
vehicles is available in the market with the flex-fuel option,
including
sedans,
vans,
SUVs and
pick-up trucks.
A 2005 survey found that 68% of American flex-fuel car owners were
not aware they owned an E85 flex. This is due to the fact that the
exterior of flex and non-flex vehicles look exactly the same; there
is no sale price difference between them; the lack of consumer's
awareness about E85s; and also the decision of American automakers
of not putting any kind of exterior labeling, so buyers can be
aware they are getting an E85 vehicle. In contrast, all Brazilian
automakers clearly mark FFVs with badging or a high quality sticker
in the exterior body, with a logo with some variant of the word
Flex. Since 2006 many new FFV models in the US feature a bright
yellow gas cap to remind drivers of the E85 capabilities, and
GM is also using badging with the
text "Flexfuel/E85 Ethanol" to clearly mark the car as an E85
FFV.
Some critics have argued, including
U.S. Representative Jay
Inslee, that American automakers have been producing E85 flex
models motivated by a loophole in the
CAFE
(Corporate Average Fuel Economy) requirements, that allows for a
fuel economy credit for every flex-fuel vehicle sold, whether or
not in practice these vehicles are fueled with E85. This loophole
might allow the car industry to meet the CAFE targets in fuel
economy just by spending between USD 100 to USD 200 that it cost to
turn a conventional vehicle into a flex-fuel, without investing in
new technology to improve fuel economy, and saving them the
potential fines for not achieving that standard in a given model
year. In an example presented by the
National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), the agency responsible
for establishing the CAFE standards, the special treatment provided
for
alternative fuel
vehicles, "
turns a dual fuel vehicle that averages 25 mpg
on gasoline or diesel... to attain the 40 mpg value for CAFE
purposes." The current CAFE standards are 27.5 mpg for
automobiles and 22.2 mpg for light-duty trucks." In late 2007, CAFE
standards received their first overhaul in more than 30 years
through the
Energy Independence
and Security Act of 2007, and now are set to rise to 35 mpg by
the year 2020.
A major
restriction hampering sales of E85 flex vehicles or fuelling with
E85, is the limited infrastructure available to sell E85 to the
public, as by October 2008 there were only 1,802 gasoline filling
stations selling E85 to the public in the entire US, with a great
concentration of E85 stations in the Corn
Belt states, lead by Minnesota
with 357 stations, the most that any other state,
followed by Illinois
with 189, Wisconsin
with 118, and Missouri
with 112. Only seven states do not have E85
available to the public, Alaska
, Hawaii
, Maine
, New Hampshire
, New
Jersey
, Rhode
Island
, and Vermont
. The main constraint for a more rapid
expansion of E85 availability is that it requires dedicated storage
tanks at filling stations, at an estimated cost of
USD 60,000 for each dedicated ethanol tank. The
Energy Policy Act of 2005, signed
into law by President Bush on 8 August 2005, in its Section 701
requires the federal government's fleet of vehicles capable of
operating on alternative fuels to be operated on these fuels
exclusively, unless a waiver is granted if the alternative fuel is
not reasonably available; or if the cost of the fuel required is
unreasonably more expensive compared to gasoline. The Federal
vehicle fleet consists of 594,900 vehicles, of which 128,491 run on
E85, representing the majority of the alternative fuel vehicles in
the Federal fleet.
Because ethanol contains close to 34% less energy per unit volume
than gasoline, E85 FFVs have a lower mileage per gallon than
gasoline. However, this lower energy content does not translate
directly into a 34% reduction in miles per U.S. gallon, because
there are many other variables that affect the performance of a
particular fuel in a particular engine, though for E85 the effect
becomes significant. E85 will produce lower mileage than gasoline,
and actual performance may vary depending on the vehicle. Based on
EPA tests for all 2006 E85 models, the average fuel economy for E85
vehicles was 25.56% lower than unleaded gasoline. The EPA-rated
mileage of current American flex-fuel vehicles could be considered
when making price comparisons, though E85 has octane rating of
about 104 and could be used as a substitute for premium gasoline.
Regional retail E85 prices vary widely across the US, with more
favorable prices in the Midwest region, where most corn is grown
and ethanol produced.
In August 2008 the US average spread between
the price of E85 and gasoline was 16.9%, while in Indiana
was 35%, 30% in Minnesota and Wisconsin, 19% in
Maryland
, 12 to 15% in California
, and just 3% in Utah
.
Depending of the vehicle capabilities, the break even price of E85
has to be between 25 to 30% lower than gasoline. (See price
comparisons for most states at
e85prices.com)
Latest developments
The
BioFuels Security Act is a
proposed legislative
Act of Congress
(
bill) intended to phase out
current single-fueled vehicles (
fossil fuel vehicles) in favor of
flexible-fuel vehicles. Under this proposal, contemporary
single-fuel vehicles would cease production in 2016. Also the
E85 and Biodiesel Access
Act introduced by Congresswoman
Stephanie Herseth Sandlin (D-SD)
and Congressman
John Shimkus (R-IL), be
included in any energy legislation that may be approved during this
session of Congress. Currently the IRS limits the tax credit only
to the amount a duel fuel dispenser exceeds the cost of a
conventional dispenser. The E85 and Biodiesel Access Act would
increase the credit from 30 percent of the cost of clean fueling
property to 50 percent and increase the maximum credit to $100,000.
This law would also extend the existing credit which is scheduled
to expire at the end of 2009. Also several members of the
United States Congress have called
for mandatory production of flexible fuel vehicles.
Chrysler, General Motors, and Ford have each pledged to manufacture
50 percent of their entire vehicle line as flexible fuel in model
year 2012, if enough fueling infrastructure develops. The new
plug-in series-hybrid vehicle Chevrolet Volt by General Motors, expected to
be launched in the North American market in 2010, will take
advantage of the
Voltec
technology (formerly known as E-Flex) that allows several options
to be available for acting as an electrical power source to
recharge the batteries, including GM's E85 flex-fuel engine. This
flexibility will allow to adapt the propulsion to other world
markets such as Brazil's E100 or to other alternative fuels. In
2008 Ford delivered the first flex-fuel
plug-in hybrid as part of a demonstration
project, a
Ford Escape Plug-in
Hybrid capable of running on E85 or gasoline.
On May 2009, President
Barack Obama
signed a
Presidential
Directive with the aim to advance biofuels research and improve
their commercialization. The Directive established a Biofuels
Interagency Working Group comprise of three agencies, the
Department of Agriculture, the
Environmental
Protection Agency, and the
Department of Energy. This group
will developed a plan to increase flexible fuel vehicle use and
assist in retail marketing efforts. Also they will coordinate
infrastructure policies impacting the supply, secure transport, and
distribution of biofuels in order to increase the number of fueling
stations throughout the country.
Other countries
Australia
In January 2007
GM brought UK-sourced
Saab 9-5 Biopower E85 flex-fuel
vehicles to Australia as a trial, in order to measure interest in
ethanol-powered vehicles in the country.
Saab Australia placed
the vehicles with the fleets of the Queensland
Government, the media, and some ethanol
producers. E85 is not available widely in Australia, but
the Manildra Group provided the
E85 blend fuel for this trial.
Saab Australia became the first car maker to produce an E85
flex-fuel car for the Australian market with the Saab 9-5 BioPower.
One month later launched the new
9-3
BioPower, the first vehicle in Australia to give drivers a
choice of three fuels, E85, diesel or gasoline, and both
automobiles are sold for a small premium.
Australia's largest
independent fuel retailer, United
Petroleum, announced plans to install Australia's first
commercial E85 fuel pumps, one in Sydney
and one in
Melbourne
.
Canada
As part of the North American auto market, by 2007 Canada had
available 51 models of E85 flex-vehicles, most from Chrysler, Ford
and General Motors, including automobiles, pickup trucks, and
SUVs. The country has around 600,000 capable
flex fuel E85s on the roads by early 2008, however, most users are
not aware they own an E85, as vehicles are not clearly labeled as
such, and only the newer models have a yellow cap in the fuel tank
informing that the vehicle can handle E85.
Another major
restriction for greater E85 fuel use is the fact that by June 2008
Canada had only three public E85 pumps, all located in Ontario
, in the cities of Guelph
, Chatham
, and Woodstock
. E85 fueling is available primarily for
fleet vehicles, including 20 government refueling stations not
available for the public. The main feedstocks for E85 production in
Canada are
corn and
wheat, and there are several proposals being discussed
to increase the actual use of E85 fuel in FFVs, such as creating an
ethanol-friendly highway or ethanol corridor.
Colombia
On March
2009 the Colombian
government enacted a mandate to introduce E85 flexible-fuel
cars. The executive decree applies to all gasoline-powered
vehicles with engines smaller than 2.0 liters manufactured,
imported, and commercialized in the country beginning in 2012,
mandating that 60% of such vehicles must have flex-fuel engines
capable of running with gasoline or E85, or any blend of both. By
2014 the mandatory quota is 80% and it will reach 100 percent by
2016. All vehicles with engines bigger than 2.0 liters must be E85
capable starting in 2013. The decree also mandates that by 2011 all
gasoline stations must provide infrastructure to guarantee
availability of E85 throughout the country. The mandatory
introduction of E85 flex-fuels has caused controversy among
carmakers, car dealers, gasoline station owners, and even some
ethanol producers complained the industry is not ready to supply
enough ethanol for the new E85 fleet.
New Zealand
In 2006
New
Zealand
began a pilot project with two E85 Ford Focus
Flexi-Fuel evaluation cars. The main feedstock used in New
Zealand for ethanol production is
whey, a
by-product of
milk production.
Paraguay
Government officials and businessmen from
Paraguay
began negotiations in 2007 with Brazilian
automakers in order to import flex cars that run on any blend of
gasoline and ethanol. If successful, Paraguay would become
the first destination for Brazilian flex-fuel car exports. In May
2008, the Paraguayan government announced a plan to eliminate
import taxes of flex-fuel vehicles and an incentive program for
ethanol production. The plan also includes the purchase of 20,000
flex cars in 2009 for the government fleet.
Thailand
In 2006,
tax incentives were established in Thailand
for the introduction of compressed natural gas (CNG) as an
alternative fuel, by eliminating
import duties and lowering excise taxes on CNG-compatible
cars. Then in 2007, Thai authorities approved incentives for
the production of "eco-cars", with the goal of the country to
become a regional hub for the production of small, affordable and
fuel-efficient cars. Seven automakers joint in the program,
Toyota,
Suzuki,
Nissan,
Mitsubishi,
Honda,
Tata and
Volkswagen. In 2008 the government
announced priority for E85, expecting these flex-fuel vehicles to
become widely available in Thailand in 2009, three years ahead of
schedule. The incentives include cuts in excise tax rates for
E85-compatible cars and reduction of corporate taxes for ethanol
producers to make sure E85 fuel supply will be met. This new plan
however, brought confusion and protests by the automakers which
sign-up for the "eco-cars", as competition with the E85 flex-fuel
cars will negatively affect their ongoing plans and investments,
and their production lines will have to be upgraded at a high cost
for them to produce flex-fuel cars. They also complained that
flex-fuel vehicles popular in a few countries around the world,
limiting their export potential as compared with other engine
technologies.
Despite the controversy, the first E85 flexible fuel vehicles were
introduced in November 2008. The first two models available in the
Thai market were the
Volvo S80 and the
C30. The S80 is manufactured locally and
the C30 is imported. By the time of the introduction of flex
vehicles there were already two gas stations with E85 fuel
available.
During 2009 it is expected that 15 fueling
stations in Bangkok
will have E85 fuel available.
Comparison among the leading markets
Comparison of key characteristics among the leading
ethanol flexible-fuel vehicle markets |
| Characteristic |
|
|
|
Units/comments |
| Type of flexible-fuel vehicle (fuel used) |
E20 to
E100 |
E85 |
E85 |
Brazil's mandatory blend is E20-E25. Winter
E85 is actually E70 in
the US and E75 in
Sweden. |
| Main feedstock used for ethanol consumption |
Sugar cane |
80% imported |
Maize |
In 2007, most Swedish ethanol was imported, with a high
share from Brazil. |
| Total flex-fuel fleet |
8.2 million |
311.1 thousand |
8.0 million(1) |
Brazil as of July 2009, Sweden as of August 2009, US by
early 2009. |
| Share of flex-fuel vehicles as % of total registered |
14.7% |
7.0% |
3.3% |
Brazil's fleet is 56 mi (May 2009), Sweden fleet is
4.4 mi (2008), and US fleet is 244 mi
(2007). |
| Ethanol fueling stations in the country |
35,017 |
1,200 |
2,200 |
Brazil for December 2007, the US as of September 2009,
and Sweden as of August 2008. |
| Ethanol filling stations as % of total |
100% |
30% |
1% |
As % of total fueling gas stations in the
country. Data for same years as above. |
| Ethanol fueling stations per million inhabitants |
184.2 |
130.4 |
6.5 |
See List of
countries by population. Brazil and US as of
2008-09-12, and Sweden as of 2008-06-30. |
| Retail price of E85 or E100 (local
currency/unit) |
R$ 1.259/lt |
SEK 8.79/lt |
US$ 2.60/gal |
Selected
regions:(2)São
Paulo , June 2008, Sweden, January 2008, and Minnesota , August 2008. |
| Retail price of gasoline or E25. (local
currency/unit) |
R$ 2.385/lt |
SEK 11.99/lt |
US$ 3.70/gal |
Prices in São
Paulo (E25), June 2008, Sweden,
January 2008, and Minnesota , August 2008. |
| Price economy ethanol/gasoline price as % |
47.2%(2)(3) |
26.7%(3) |
29.7%(2)(3) |
São Paulo, June 2008, Sweden January 2008, and
Minnesota, August 2008. |
Notes: (1)The effective number
of E85 flex vehicles in US roads actually using ethanol fuel is
lower than shown, as a survey have shown than 68% of E85 owners are
not aware they own a flex-fuel vehicle. A 2007
national survey found that only 5% of drivers actually use
biofuels. (2) Regional prices vary widely in Brazil
and the US. The states chosen reflect some of the
lowest retail prices for ethanol, as both São
Paulo and
Minnesota are main growers of feedstock and producers of
ethanol, hence, the comparison presented is one of the most
favorable for ethanol/gasoline price ratios.
For example, US average spread was
16.9% in
August 2008, and it varied from 35% in Indiana to 3% in Utah. See more US
price comparisons for most states at e85prices.com, and
annual fuel costs for 2008 FFV US models at www.fueleconomy.gov.
(3) Brazilian gasoline is heavily taxed (~54%), US ethanol
production is subsidized (a US$ 0.51/gal federal tax credit), and
Swedish E85 is exempt of CO2 and energy taxes until 2009 (~30%
price reduction). |
List of currently-produced flexible fuel vehicles
Worldwide
Brazil
- Chevrolet: Astra, Blazer, Celta, Classic, Corsa, Montana, Meriva, Prisma, S10,
Vectra, Zafira.
- Citroën: C3, C4, C4
Pallas, Xsara
Picasso.
- Fiat
: Doblò, Linea,
Idea, Mille,
Palio, Palio Fire, Palio Weekend, Punto, Siena, Stilo, Strada,
Uno.
- Ford: Courier, EcoSport,
Fiesta, Focus, Ka.
- Honda: City, Civic, Fit, CG Titan (motorcycle)
- Mitsubishi: Pajero TR4, Pajero Sport
- Nissan: Livina, Sentra,
Tiida
- Peugeot: 206,
307
- Renault: Clio, Kangoo,
Grand Tour, Mégane, Scénic, Logan, Sandero,
Symbol.
- Toyota: Toyota
Corolla VVT-i Flex and Fielder
- Volkswagen: Bora, CrossFox, Fox, Gol,
Golf, Kombi, Parati, Polo,
Saveiro, SpaceFox, Voyage.
Europe
- Citroën C4 1.6 BioFlex
- Ford Focus, Ford C-MAX, Ford
Mondeo, Ford S-Max, Ford Galaxy
- Koenigsegg CCXR
- Peugeot 307 1.6 BioFlex
- Saab 9-5, Saab
9-3
- Volvo C30 1.8F FlexiFuel, S40 1.8F FlexiFuel, V50 1.8F
FlexiFuel, XC60 , V70 2.0F FlexiFuel, S80 2.0F
FlexiFuel
United States
- Chevrolet Avalanche,
Silverado, Suburban, Tahoe (all 2007 and 2008 models, some
2002–2006), Impala 2006 and later
3.5L, Monte Carlo 2006 and
later 3.5L, HHR, S-10 Pickup.
- Chrysler Sebring, Chrysler Town & Country,
Chrysler Aspen
- Dodge Caravan, Durango, Grand
Caravan, Ram Pickup, Stratus, Avenger,
Dodge Dakota
- Ford Crown Victoria,
Ford Escape, Ford Explorer, 2009-present Ford Expedition/Expedition EL,
Ford Flex, 2006
F-150, 1999–2000 Ranger, Grand Marquis, 1999–2001 Taurus, 2002–2004 3.0L Taurus sedan and wagon, 2004–2005 3.0L Taurus sedan and wagon , Sport Trac XLT, Fusion 2010, Mercury Grand Marquis, Mercury Mountaineer, Lincoln Town Car, Lincoln Navigator, Mercury Sable
- GMC Sierra, Yukon, Yukon XL
- Isuzu Hombre
- 4.7L Jeep Commander, Jeep Grand Cherokee
- Mazda B3000
- Mercedes-Benz C-Class: W204
platform: C300 RWD automatic 3.0L (2008); W203 platform: C230 2.5L
(2007), C240 2.6L RWD automatic (2005), C320 3.2L (2003–2005)
- Nissan Titan
See also
References
- See definition in Glossary and Abbreviations
- See definition of FFV
- See definition of Dual-Fuel Vehicle
- See definition of Bi-fuel Vehicle
- See this article for a comprehensive evaluation of the Astra
Tri-fuel
- The article argues that even though Fiat called it tetra fuel,
it actually runs on three fuels: natural gas, ethanol, and
gasoline, as Brasilian gasoline is an E20 to E25 blend.
- Hunt, V, D, The Gasohol Handbook, Industrial Press Inc., 1981,
pp 9, 420,421, 442
- Also published in the Journal of Scientific & Industrial
Research Vol. 62, January-February 2003, pp. 97-105
- Original source: 1996 North American International Auto Show
Press Release
- Oxfam Briefing Paper 114.
- Originally published online in Science Express on 7 February
2008. See Letters to Science by Wang and Haq. There are
critics to these findings for assuming a worst case scenario.
- Originally published online in Science Express on 7 February
2008. There are rebuttals to these findings for assuming a worst
case scenario
- Source:F.O. Licht
- Ph.D. Dissertation Thesis, pp. 81-82
- Ano 2, No. 3 (every article is presented in both English and
Portuguese)
- Print edition No. 1941
- Production up to July 2009
- Table includes data by month for year 2008
- This decree fixed the mandatory blend at 25% starting July 1st,
2007
- See article 9º and modifications approved by Law Nº 10.696,
2003-07-02 increasing the upper limit to 25%
- www.eia.doe.gov DOE FAQ
- www.eere.energy.gov Energy.gov site
- www.eia.doe.gov Alternative Fuel Efficiencies in Miles per
Gallon
- Until May 2009 DENATRAN reports a total registered fleet of
over 55.9 million, including motorcycles, trucks and special
equipment, and 37.9 million automobiles and light commercial
vehicles.
- See Chapter 6. Homegrown Energy.
- Originally published in Revista Valor Econômico.
- Policy Document 01/08, pp. 35-36
- Click on the graph "Bought ethanol cars" showing total
sales of E85 flexifuels by year since 2001.
- See sections or chapters on Brazil (Chp 1), the US (3.3),
Europe (Chp 4), and Sweden (4.11)
- This tool works in ten languages
- Only Morrison Supermarkets BioEthanol E85 reported
- As of 2008-09-16
- Trend of total FFVs in use from 1998-2008, based on FFV
production rates and life expectancy (Excel file)
- pp. 28-30
- Table I-1, targets for year 2007.
- For a complete and updated listing, go to
www.e85refueling.com
- Number of stations in leading states complemented with search
on www.e85refueling.com
- http://www.fueleconomy.gov EPA
Mileage
- GovTrack: S. 2817 [109th]: Text of
Legislation
- See Table 3.17, pp. 138.
External links