Benefits of E85
E85 is the term for motor fuel blends of 85% ethanol and
just 15% gasoline. It is a renewable biofuel designed for use in Flexible
Fuel Vehicles. Ethanol is an alcohol made from corn and other starch crops
like barley and wheat that have been converted into simple sugars and then
fermented and distilled. Ethanol has been used in cars since Henry Ford
designed his 1908 Model T to operate on alcohol.
E85 keeps your fuel system clean because it burns cleaner than regular
gas or diesel and doesn't leave behind gummy deposits. Not concerned about
engine life? Then perhaps performance is important to you. E85 has the
highest octane of any commercially available automotive fuel at more than
100. This compares very favorably to the octane rating of regular unleaded
of 89 or premium of 93.
The performance characteristics of ethanol are sufficient to have convinced
The Indy Racing League, which includes the Indianapolis 500, to switch
to 100% ethanol starting in 2006 to fuel the race cars. If it's good enough
for race cars speeding at over 200 miles per hour, surely it is good enough
for your Flexible Fuel Vehicle, too.
When you add oxygen to a fire, the flame grows. This same principle happens
in your engine. Adding ethanol to your fuel adds oxygen to the fuel. This
additional oxygen helps your engine to more fully combust the gasoline.
This results in fewer harmful tailpipe emissions like carbon monoxide,
volatile organic compounds and other toxic components. The American Lung
Association of Metropolitan Chicago credits ethanol-blended fuel with
reducing smog-forming emissions there by 25% since 1990.
In addition to clean air benefits, E85 is a "Renewable Fuel".
Why is it considered renewable? Ethanol is made from grain produced on
farms across the country. Although ethanol can be produced from a variety
of grains, today it is made primarily from corn. The energy of sun is
captured in the corn as it grows. When the corn is processed into ethanol,
the energy of the sun is converted to ethanol. The following season, a
new crop is planted and more fuel and energy are harvested. Contrast this
to the production of crude oil buried deep within the earth's core. The
oil we're burning took hundreds of millions of years to form. Once extracted
from the ground, the oil is not renewed... at least for another couple
hundred million or so years.
When burned, fossil fuels release carbon, once locked deep within the
earth's core, into the atmosphere. Science points to these releases as
one of the leading causes of global warming.
Unlike fossil fuels, E85 actually reduces greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.
The grain or other biomass used to make ethanol absorbs carbon dioxide
as it grows.
Ethanol use provides benefits to the entire nation. Most Americans do
not realize the risk our nation faces as a result of our dependence on
foreign oil. The Energy Information Administration (EIA) forecasts the
nation's oil consumption will grow 44% between 2000 and 2025. Over this
same time period, our dependence on imports will grow from 54% to 70%.
In addition to national benefits, ethanol production contributes to economic
growth in rural communities across the heartland of our nation. The combination
of spending for annual plant operations and capital spending for new plants
under construction added more than $25.1 billion to gross output in the
U.S. economy in 2004. In that same year, the ethanol industry supported
the creation of more than 147,000 jobs in all sectors of the U.S. economy,
boosting U.S. household income by $4.4 billion.
According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, ethanol production adds
25-50 cents to the value of a bushel of corn, or as much as $5.5 billion
over the entire corn crop per year. The increased value of the corn lowers
federal farm program costs. In 2004, USDA estimates ethanol production
reduced farm program costs by $3.2 billion.
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