Vegetable oils as alternative energy

Nebraska school district soybean biodiesel powered bus made possible through the Soybean Board of Nebraska grant program.[1]

Vegetable oils are increasingly used as a substitute for fossil fuels. Vegetable oils are the basis of biodiesel, which can be used like conventional diesel. Some vegetable oil blends are used in unmodified vehicles, but straight vegetable oil often needs specially prepared vehicles which have a method of heating the oil to reduce its viscosity and surface tension, sometimes specially made injector nozzles, increased injection pressure and stronger glow-plugs, in addition to fuel pre-heating is used.[2] Another alternative is vegetable oil refining.

The availability of biodiesel around the world is increasing, although still tiny compared to conventional fossil fuel sources. There is significant research in algaculture methods to make biofuel from algae.

Concerns have been expressed about growing crops for fuel use rather than food and the environmental impacts of large-scale agriculture and land clearing required to expand the production of vegetable oil for fuel use. These effects/impacts would need to be specifically researched and evaluated, economically and ecologically, and weighed in balance with the proposed benefits of vegetable oil fuel in relation to the use of other fuel sources.

  1. ^ "Welcome to the Nebraska Soybean Checkoff Board". Archived from the original on February 17, 2007. Retrieved March 7, 2007.
  2. ^ "Straight vegetable oil as diesel fuel: Journey to Forever". journeytoforever.org. Retrieved 2022-08-14.