Wednesday

New safety warning from NGVAmerica and CVEF

Convert Your Vehicle to Compressed Natural Gas - SAFELY
Source - NGVAmerica - CVEF
Thursday, 22 May 2008

USA

The following bulletin was issued by NGVAmerica and the Clean Vehicle Education Foundation(CVEF). Though aimed at the US market, the safety message is relevant to most other markets as well.

As gasoline and diesel prices continue to rise, many people are considering converting their car or light truck to run on compressed natural gas (CNG). CNG is a clean, inexpensive (currently selling for less than half the cost of gasoline) domestic fuel. Best of all, it uses zero imported (or domestic) petroleum. And government rebates are available to help with the cost of conversion and to further lower the cost of CNG fuel. But conversion from gasoline to CNG should not be done by unqualified technicians, using unapproved conversion kits or unsafe high-pressure gas cylinders.

The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has rules concerning the manufacture, sale and installation of alternative fuel engine conversion systems. The California Air Resources Board has similar and even more stringent emission rules for conversions in that state. Only EPA and/or CARB-certified conversion systems are permitted to be installed on vehicles. While a variety of non-certified systems are sold on the Internet and/or offered by some automotive shops, EPA has taken the position that installation of these systems is "tampering with a federally approved emission control system", a federal violation punishable by a substantial financial penalty. Installation of non-certified systems can also cause a vehicle to fail emissions inspection.

Because of the technical difficulty and the expense of EPA and CARB certification, certified conversions are only available for a limited number of engine families and applicable vehicle models. An up-to-date list of all currently available EPA- and CARB-certified engine retrofit and repower systems is available at NGVAmerica. New Honda Civic GX CNG vehicles, built in the USA, are also available in some states (see Honda).

Installation of an engine conversion package and fueling system may be done when the vehicle is first purchased or after it has been in service. EPA and CARB require that converters provide appropriate documentation and training to installers of their systems. Installation by non-qualified installers is illegal and could damage the retrofit equipment or the engine (or both), compromise vehicle performance, or render the vehicle unsafe to operate. No EPA- or CARB-certified engine conversion systems are sold to untrained/unapproved installers.

CNG conversions SHOULD NOT be performed by unqualified technicians! Properly installed CNG systems are safe and economical, with the vehicle operating almost exactly like a gasoline vehicle. However CNG systems rely on high-pressure compressed natural gas for fuel, and high-pressure gases require specialized components and technical skills for installation. Conversions should be done according to the National Fire Protection Association's Vehicular Fuel Systems Code (NFPA 52).

CNG converters and vehicle owners are reminded that CNG cylinders, often the most expensive component of the fuel system, must carry labels showing they meet the applicable Department of Transportation standard (FMVSS 304) by the symbol "DOT" on the label. The label will show an expiration date, after which the cylinder may not be safely used. Cylinders should also be inspected for safety every three years or 36,000 miles, whichever comes first (see www.cleanvehicle.org for more information). Converters and vehicle owners should have documentation that this safety inspection has been done.

Detailed answers to "Frequently Asked Questions About Converting Vehicles to Operate on Natural Gas" are available from NGVAmerica.


Friday

NGV Global - 21 May 2008

This is the international newsletter for Natural Gas Vehicles. You are welcome

to click on the links to the NGV Global site and visit them. They have all
sorts of information about the global community for NGV's and recent inovations all
over the world.



NGV GLOBAL - Latest NGV industry headlines brought to you weekly
May 21 2008



IF YOU HAVE ANY DIFFICULTIES READING THIS EMAIL, NEWS ITEMS
CAN BE VIEWED AT http://www.ngvglobal.com



==========

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==========
NGV 2008 – The Stone Age Did Not End Because of a Lack of Stones
Source - NGV Global
Wednesday, 21 May 2008

IANGV-2008.gif

LESS THAN TWO WEEKS TO GO. REGISTER NOW. BOOK YOUR
EXHIBITION SPACE NOW

THE COST PENDULUM SWINGS BACK IN FAVOR OF NATURAL GAS

Many people don’t realize that at the start of the automobile industry,
natural gas was often tested in many different engine models. However,
large scale use of natural gas for transport was put aside in favor of low
cost liquid fuels such as gasoline and diesel. Natural gas was thus
utilized for other applications such as heating or commercial uses. Since
that time, things have changed – natural gas is more widely available, it
can be produced from renewable sources, is an undoubted leader in
environmental benefits. It can now also compete with liquid fuels. All of
these factors make it timely to consider the importance of natural gas as
a transport fuel which is why delegates from around the world will
converge on Rio de Janiero in less than two weeks for NGV 2008.

Read more...http://www.ngvglobal.com

==========
Opel Announces New CNG Zafira for Europe
Source - NGV Global
Friday, 16 May 2008

Germany

50,000 CNG Zafiras already on the road!

In 2009, GM’s Opel will introduce one new 1.6-liter turbo bifuel (natural
gas - petrol) engine delivering around 150 hp. Developed by GM Powertrain
in Turin, the new unit joins Opel’s current aspirated compressed natural
gas (CNG) engine. “Environmental awareness and driving fun are no longer
mutually exclusive,” says Alain Visser, Chief Marketing Officer, GM
Europe. “With this newly developed turbocharged CNG engine, we continue
pursuing our strategy of turbocharging engines to increase efficiency –
meaning lower consumption and emissions – without making any concessions
in performance.”

Read more...http://www.ngvglobal.com

==========
Volvo Swiss Edition Multifuel Unveiled
Source - NGV Global
Saturday, 10 May 2008

Volvo V70 Multi-Fuel - also available in the V50 model Switzerland
Volvo Automobile (Schweiz) AG. has unveiled an exclusively Swiss Edition
Volvo V50 1.8 "Multifuel" car, which can run on either ethanol, gasoline,
Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) or biogas. Volvo’s Swiss bureau has led the
project, which will introduce V50 and V70 as Multifuel models. This
project has been conducted in cooperation with F.+Ch. Mueller AG, which
specializes in the conversion of vehicles to use gas. V50 1.8F and V70
2.0F “Multifuel” cars will cost around 3900 EUR (approx $6,200) more than
standard models. The V50 model has a 1.8 litre engine with two gas
cylinders of 43 litres providing a driving distance of 250 km with gas.
The volume of the E85/gasoline tank is 55 litres. Both the V50 and V70
cars are offered through Swiss Volvo dealers from June 2008. (See Volvo
press release - in German.)

Read more...http://www.ngvglobal.com

==========
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==========
UPS Orders 300 More CNG Fleet Vehicles
Source - NGV Global
Tuesday, 13 May 2008

UPS CNG Truck USA, Atlanta

Freight giant UPS has ordered 300 Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) vehicles
for its U.S. delivery fleet. Together with an order for 200 hybrid
electric vehicles the UPS alternative fuel fleet - already the largest
such private fleet in the United States - will grow 30 percent from 1,718
to 2,218 low-carbon vehicles. The 300 CNG vehicles will be deployed later
this year and join more than 800 such vehicles already in use in the
United States. The vehicles are expected to yield a 20 percent reduction
in emissions over the cleanest diesel engines available today.

Read more...http://www.ngvglobal.com

==========
50th & 1000th NGV - Same Car, Different Celebrations
Source - Erdgasfahren
Friday, 16 May 2008

VW Caddy CNG IEK Germany, Leipzig

Tool manufacturer Leitz GmbH & Co has celebrated the purchase of its 50th
natural gas powered Volkswagen. The purchase of the VW Caddy EcoFuel was
made with the financial support of the Initiativkreis Erdgas als
Kraftstoff (IEK) - the Initiative for Natural Gas Fuel association. The
IEK has now supported the purchase of 60 natural gas vehicles (NGVs) for
Leitz. By year's end, the Leitz group wants to have 80 NGVs, making up
more than one third of all vehicles in the company's fleet.

More information - http://www.erdgasfahrzeuge.de

==========
ANGVA 2007 Proceedings Available Now
Source - NGV Global
Wednesday, 21 May 2008

Industry members who missed out on attending the ANGVA 2007 Conference in
Bangkok, Thailand last year now have the opportunity to benefit from the
presentations made. Proceedings from the conference can be purchased via
download from the ANGVA 2007 website. The purchase price, allowing access
to more than 50 presentations, for ANGVA members is $US35 and for
non-members is $55.

Read more...http://www.ngvglobal.com

==========
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==========
Natural Gas Vehicle Numbers Climb in Peru
Source - RPP News
Saturday, 03 May 2008

Peru, Lima

The Peruvian Chamber of Natural Gas Vehicles (CPGNV) anticipates that by
late 2008 there will be 60,000 vehicles using natural gas in Lima and
Callao, representing a major breakthrough in changing the country's energy
mix. In addition, the Chamber projects that 60 natural gas service stations
(gasocentros) will be added within that time frame. These projections
assume positive responses to the elimination of the Selective Consumption
Tax (ISC) for the purchase of new cars and other government measures,
according to CPGNV general manager, Jorge Juarez.

Read more...http://www.ngvglobal.com

==========
Debut of CNG Powered Plug-In Hybrid Refuse Vehicle
Source - NGV Global
Tuesday, 20 May 2008

USA, Fresno CA

The City of Fresno has debuted and demonstrated the world’s first
operational compressed natural gas (CNG) powered plug-in hybrid refuse
truck. The truck is believed to be the first refuse truck in the world to
combine a natural gas engine with a rechargeable electric hybrid drive
system. The truck boasts several economic and environmental benefits: an
estimated 40% improvement in fuel economy with the use of a hybrid
electric drive system; the capability of operating in all-electric mode
for over 10 miles; and a 90% reduction in smog-forming emissions.

Read more...http://www.ngvglobal.com

==========
Iranian Conference and Exhibition This August - IANGVA / ANGVA Endorsed
Source - NGV Global
Friday, 23 May 2008

1st International Exhibition and National Conference on CNG & Related
Industries

Olympic Hotel, Tehran, August 2 - 4 2008

Abstracts invited - 20 June Deadline

The National Iranian Gas Co. (NIGC) and National Iranian Oil Refinery and
Distribution Co. (NIORC) are organizers for this event, endorsed by IANGV
and ANGVA . They are currently inviting interest from exhibitors and
speakers interested in submitting abstracts for presentation at the
conference. For more information please see www.cngiranconf.com.

Read more...http://www.ngvglobal.com

==========
AT&T Introduces 'Green Fleet' of Alternative-Fuel Vehicles
Source - NGV Global
Wednesday, 21 May 2008

USA, San Antonio

Telecommunications giant AT&T Inc. has announced plans to add 105
alternative-fuel vehicles to the corporate fleet to reduce its impact on
the environment and its dependence on imported oil. Included in the
selection of vehicles are 25 Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) vans. The
vehicles will roll out in various locations across the U.S. beginning in
June. A Green Technology insignia will make the vehicles easy to identify
on the road. AT&T estimates that its use of alternative-fueled and more
fuel-efficient vehicles will reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 124 metric
tons and conserve nearly 34,395 gallons of fuel annually. In particular the
CNG vans are expected to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by nearly 30
percent compared with traditional gasoline vans.

Read more...http://www.ngvglobal.com

==========
Singapore CNG Firm Gets Philippines' Nod
Source - GMA News
Friday, 16 May 2008

Philippines, Manila

Singapore-based Callandra LCNG Fuels Corp., which plans to put up at least
six compressed natural gas (CNG) and liquified natural gas (LNG) utilities
in the Philippines, has received accreditation from the Philippines
Department of Energy (DOE). The certification is given under the Natural
Gas Program for Public Transport (NGVPPT) and certifies the company as a
Category IV Refuelling Station Operator. Chief Executive Randall C.
Antonio said in a report from GMA News that they intended to start
deploying the service that targets local bus companies.

Read more...http://www.ngvglobal.com

==========
Flint to Build Biomethane Plant for Vehicles
Source - NGVAmerica
Friday, 16 May 2008

USA, Michigan

The city of Flint, Michigan and an alternative energy company, Swedish
Biogas International, announced a joint plan to build a plant to convert
waste from the city's wastewater facility into biomethane. Flint would be
the first location for the Swedish company, which hopes to build plants
nation-wide, said Peter Unden, the CEO of Swedish Biogas. The project will
receive $6 to $10 million in start-up money from federal and state grants
as well as Sweden and private money. Initially, the biomethane would fuel
Flint's fleet of municipal vehicles.

Read more...http://www.ngvglobal.com

==========
CNG Continues To Flow Despite Quake
Source - International Business Times
Saturday, 17 May 2008

China

After the destructive earthquake in Wenchuan County, Sichuan Province on
May 12, China Petrochemical Corporation (CPC), or Sinopec, has been
reported as being able to maintain normal operations on a number of
compressed natural gas (CNG) stations in the Chengdu area, the capital of
Sichuan. At present, Sinopec supplies Chengdu with 1.3 million cubic
meters of natural gas per day, which is basically the same quantity as
that before the earthquake. At the epicenter, Mianyang, the company is
supplying 130,000 cubic meters per day, of which 100,000 cubic meters are
going to northern Sichuan disaster relief vehicles, and 30,000 cubic
meters for enterprises. IANGV's sympathy for the loss of life is extended
to the people of China.

Read more...http://www.ngvglobal.com

==========

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SWAGELOK http://www.swagelok.com

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TOMASETTO ACHILLE http://www.tomasettoachille.com/

COMPAC http://www.compac.co.nz

INFLEX http://www.inflex.com.ar

NGVI http://www.ngvi.co.kr

IVECO http://www.iveco.com

HARDSTAFF GROUP http://www.hardstaffgroup.co.uk

==========

----------------------------------------------------------------
EVENTS & CONFERENCES
Read more... http://www.ngvglobal.com

2008

June 3-5 Brazil, Rio de Janiero (RioCidadeNova Convention Center)
NGV2008. IANGV biennial conference and exhibition www.ngv2008.com.br

June 14-15 USA, Los Angeles (Antelope Valley Fairgrounds0 1st Annual
Children's Charities Alt Fuels Expo altfuelsmgr@gmail.com

June 17-19 Ukraine, Kiev World of Liquefied and Compressed Gases
2008 www.medvin.kiev.ua

August 2-4 Iran, Tehran 1st International Exhibition and National
Conference on CNG & Related Industries www.cngiranconf.com

September 7-9 Sweden, Biogas Highway 2008 www.miljoteknik.com

September 23-25 Russia, Moscow GASSUF' 2008 - Organizers: Gazprom &
NGVRUS. e.pronin@adm.gazprom.ru

September 25-27 Italy, Turin II World Fair of NGV &
Hydrogen www.ngvworldfair.com

October 4-5 USA, San Diego 2008 National NGV
Conference-Summit www.ngvamerica.org

December Iran, Tehran Second Iranian CNG Conference www.afuek.ir


2009
March 24-26 India, New Delhi NGV India 2009, South Asia's Natural Gas
for
Vehicles Conference and Exhibition www.ngvevents.com

October 27-29 South Korea, Donghae ANGVA 2009, Conference and
Exhibition www.angva2009.com

Read more... http://www.ngvglobal.com

----------
Copyright 2007 IANGV - PO BOX 56, Waitakere, NEW ZEALAND.
http://www.iangv.org

NGV Global is published on behalf of IANGV by NGV Network.

PRESS RELEASES may be submitted by email to
ngv@ngvnetwork.com

Wednesday

E-Bay updates to resume in on 19 May

My apologies to all who use this as a focal point to find E-bay vehicles. I have been having problems with my computer in that listing E-bay vehicles has been made a tedious process and doing so has bogged down my ever so slow system. What should take half an hour is made a long arduous process because my system keeps shutting down after going through several e-Bay entries.

Also, e-Bay keeps changing its e-mail forwarding format, necessitating changes to conform with what I feel is a proper format for listing on this site. Also, my Multiply page will take all my entries here and cross-post them to my Multiply page which necessitates further editing.

So that's the reason the e-Bay entries stopped for a while. I have also been toying with taking this site to its own domain name, however that will remain for a future where I have a little more money and time to deal with this.

I obtained a new system the other day and once I get it through its teething troubles and set up glitches, I can use it to surf at a much faster rate and the additional memory will probably prevent many of the shutdown errors I have been having. (I hope).

I do this for the love of these kind of cars. I don't have one and would really like to have one. Especially now since gas went up another twenty cents a gallon the other day.

I have a love for the Cavalier, but I find my heart set on a Crown Vic. I'd really like to get one. A Civic GX would be nice too. When the money and time is right I hope to get one soon.

I would like to thank all who read this page. I have no idea how many use this as a resource or how many hits I get. I hope dear reader, that you haven't been too inconvenienced by my lack of posts. If you do enjoy the information presented and find it useful, please by all means, leave feedback. If you have any ideas for improvements, let me know as well.

Thank you all and Keep the Blue Flame Alive!

Saturday

CNG Vehicles in Utah, from the AP

Natural-gas vehicles hot in Utah, where the fuel is cheap

By PAUL FOY, AP Business WriterFri Apr 25, 3:06 AM ET

Troy Anderson was at the gas pump and couldn't have been happier, filling up at a rate of $5 per tank.

Anderson was paying 63.8 cents per gallon equivalent for compressed natural gas, making Utah a hot market for vehicles that run on the fuel.

It's the country's cheapest rate for compressed gas, according to the Natural Gas Vehicle Coalition, and far less than the $3.56 national average price for a gallon of gasoline.

"I'm totally celebrating," crowed Anderson, a 44-year-old social worker, who picked up a used Honda Civic GX two months ago. "This is the greatest thing. I can't believe more people aren't talking about it. This is practically free."

Personal ownership of natural gas-fueled vehicles in Utah soared from practically nothing a few years ago to an estimated 5,000 vehicles today, overwhelming a growing refueling network, where compressors sometimes can't maintain enough pressure to fill tanks completely for every customer.

"Nobody expected this kind of growth. We got caught by the demand," said Gordon Larsen, a supervisor at Utah utility Questar Gas.

Utah has 91 stations, including 20 open to the public, mostly in the Salt Lake City area. The others are reserved for commercial drivers, such as school districts, bus fleets and big businesses such as a Coca-Cola distributor.

It's possible to drive the interstates between Rock Springs, Wyo., and St. George, Utah — a distance of 477 miles — and find 22 places to pull off and fill up.

California has more stations but prices are much higher there, the equivalent of $2.50 a gallon for gasoline.

"Utah has the cheapest prices by a big margin," said Richard Kolodziej, president of the Natural Gas Vehicle Coalition, whose members include utilities, Honda Motor Co., environmental groups and transit agencies.

Among major utilities outside of Alaska, Questar is the country's cheapest provider of natural gas for home use. It can offer compressed natural gas for cars even cheaper because of a federal tax credit.

The incentives don't stop there. Buyers of new and some used and converted vehicles can claim their own federal and state tax credits totaling up to $7,000 — nearly the extra cost of a CNG-fueled vehicle.

Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman, a Republican, paid $12,000 of his own money to modify a state-owned Chevrolet Suburban last June.

"Converting to CNG gives us an opportunity to promote energy security and support a clean-burning alternative," Huntsman said in an e-mail Thursday. "Plus, who can beat running a Suburban on 63 cents a gallon?"

Mike Gaffa, a 39-year-old Continental Airlines reservation clerk, bought a used Ford F-150 pickup for $10,500. The vehicle came with a bonus: a previous owner added three extra tanks that fill the bed of his pickup.

"I don't even keep track of gasoline prices anymore," Gaffa boasted. "You'd be hard-pressed to find another vehicle that can go 600 miles on a fill-up."

And when he runs out of natural gas, he can switch over to a regular gasoline tank for a total range of more than 850 miles.

Utah has caught the attention of Honda, which can't make CNG-equipped Civic GXs fast enough at an Ohio plant. For now, it makes the compact available for sale to individuals only in California and New York, but executives say Utah could be next on their list.

Aside from fleet sales, no other automaker offers a CNG-powered car in the U.S.

Most Utah buyers must turn to the used-car market. They are tracking down vehicles on the Internet, some made earlier by the Detroit automakers. Some dealers here are hauling used CNG vehicles to Utah by the truckload.

"The demand in Utah is huge," Kolodziej said. "It's sucking all the used vehicles from around the country."

Tuesday

NGV Industry in a World of Rising Oil Prices

NGV Industry in a World of Rising Oil Prices
Source - Dr Garth Harris, Secretary-General IANGV
Thursday, 13 March 2008
It would appear that the price of oil is going to be $100 per barrel
or more for the foreseeable future. As it's recent meeting, OPEC
decided that while it is not going to cut production, it will not
increase it. It would also appear that there is likely to be a
downturn in the economies all the developed countries which will
naturally lead to reduced demand for oil. However the demand for oil
is increasing in Asia which at least to some extent will counteract
the reduced demand for oil in other parts of the world. In addition
there is some doubt of the ability of OPEC to increase production.

The other part of the equation is the amount of oil which is
available. The BP Statistical Review of World Energy June 2007
www.bp.com gives world oil reserves as 1371 trillion tonnes. This is
the amount of oil in known fields which it is estimated can be
recovered under existing economic and production conditions. The
reserves to production ratio is 41 years. Back in 1980, reserves
were 667 trillion tonnes and have risen fairly steadily since then.

Natural gas on the other hand has known reserves of 1629 trillion
tons of oil equivalent, that is slightly more than oil reserves.
However the reserves to production ratio is significantly higher at
63 years. Natural gas reserves have more than doubled since 1980.

Another issue of rising importance is the increase in price of
commodities, particularly food. This has been brought about by the
drive to convert food crops into energy products such as ethanol and
at least in part promoted by subsidies.

In many countries where there are natural gas reserves, natural gas
supply is likely to be little impediment to the establishment of a
NGV industry. The amount of natural gas which is likely to be used
over say the first 5 years would be very small compared with other
uses of natural gas.

Secondly, the vehicles that would be using natural gas will vary from
country to country. Most large NGV countries have fleets dominated
by light duty vehicles. However heavy duty vehicles are likely to be
of interest in some countries. For instance, heavy duty trucks and
city buses are popular in NGV fleets in countries such as US, UK.
The Port of Long Beach, California is requiring all vehicles
operating in the port to operate on clean fuels by 2012. Heavy
vehicles use large quantities of gas and vehicle manufacturers can
supply new, reliable vehicles. Readers of NGV Global will have seen
articles concerning availability and fleet conversion.

I recently visited Iran to find that with all its oil resources it
has a program to convert all its vehicles, light duty and heavy duty,
to natural gas. Very shortly, only NGVs will be manufactured in
Iran .

Thirdly, natural gas and biomethane are the same fuel. One is
fossil, the other is renewable. Thus establishment of a CNG industry
based on natural gas can lead directly to use of biomethane in
transport without the difficult fuel related problems that face some
other biofuels. This can be regarded as part of the pathway to
hydrogen which is a gaseous fuel using much of the same technology as
CNG both for refueling and in vehicles.

Biomethane is of much interest worldwide at present. The most
popular sources are municipal waste treatment including sewage and
landfills. Sweden is a prominent country with several municipal bus
fleets.

Given the problems with some "renewable" transport fuels such as
ethanol, biomethane probably has a higher prospect for success than
other biofuels. While most biomethane at present is derived from
waste, it could be made at a large scale using feedstock which is not
competing with food production as in the case of ethanol and using
technologies which are largely already developed. It can be
distributed using the existing natural gas pipe network.

In conclusion, the existing NGV industry should regard the high price
of oil as an opportunity to grow. In some countries the pump price
of CNG is likely to be lower than gasoline or diesel. Natural gas is
widely available in many countries. Different types of vehicles may
be more attractive in some countries than others because of the local
conditions. Natural gas can logically lead to renewable biomethane
and even to hydrogen.

Thursday

Storing CNG in Corncobs

Storing CNG in Corncobs

Any news about corn as it relates to alternative fuels is usually reserved for ethanol. It turns out that the abundant cash crop has more to offer in the way of clean-burning energy than simply provid­ing a feedstock for fuel.

Researchers from the University of Missouri-Columbia (MU) and the Midwest Research Institute (MRI) in Kansas City have found a way to use corncobs to store natural gas – and at an all-time high density, no less. With corncob waste as a starting material, the researchers have created carbon briquettes with complex nano-scale pores that can store 180 times their own volume of natural gas at a pressure of 500 psi. Significantly, these corncob-based bri­quettes are the first technology to meet the 180:1 storage-to-volume ratio that the U.S. Department of Energy set as a development goal in 2000. A pickup truck equipped with the corncob-based natural gas storage is currently in regular use by the Kansas City Office of Environmental Quality.

The breakthrough is great news for natural gas-powered transpor­tation. The ability to store more energy per volume means increased driving range without sacrificing interior volume. Furthermore, the relatively low 500 psi storage pressure is the same as that of natural gas pipelines, eliminating the need for compression to the 3600 psi used in today’s bulky storage cylinders. The low pressure of this new technology opens the door for flexibility in tank design similar to today’s gasoline tanks – a flat, compact shape that could fit under the passenger floor.

http://www.greencar.com/news/storing-cng-in-corncobs

From the HORIZON Solutions Site, www.solutions-site.org

Energy
Record-breaking Methane Storage System Derived From Corncobs May Encourage Mass-market Natural Gas Automobiles
By
Feb 22, 2007, 3:21pm

Researchers at the University of Missouri-Columbia and the Midwest Research Institute in Kansas City have developed a method to convert corncob waste into a carbon "sponge" with nanoscale pores. The new material can store large quantities of natural gas and can be formed into a variety of shapes, ideal characteristics for next-generation gas storage tanks on methane-powered automobiles.

Researchers have developed a corncob-derived carbon "sponge" that can store natural gas. Photo by Nicolle Rager Fuller, National Science Foundation

Using corncob waste as a starting material, researchers have created carbon briquettes with complex nanopores capable of storing natural gas at an unprecedented density of 180 times their own volume and at one seventh the pressure of conventional natural gas tanks.

The breakthrough, announced on February 16, 2007 in Kansas City, Mo., is a significant step forward in the nationwide effort to fit more automobiles to run on methane, an abundant fuel that is domestically produced and cleaner burning than gasoline.

Supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) Partnership for Innovation program, researchers at the University of Missouri-Columbia (MU) and Midwest Research Institute (MRI) in Kansas City developed the technology. The technology has been incorporated into a test bed installed on a pickup truck used regularly by the Kansas City Office of Environmental Quality.

The briquettes are the first technology to meet the 180 to 1 storage to volume target set by the U.S. Department of Energy in 2000, a long-term goal of principal project leader Peter Pfeifer of MU.

"We are very excited about this breakthrough because it may lead to a flat and compact tank that would fit under the floor of a passenger car, similar to current gasoline tanks," said Pfeifer. "Such a technology would make natural gas a widely attractive alternative fuel for everyone."

According to Pfeifer, the absence of such a flatbed tank has been the principal reason why natural gas, which costs significantly less than gasoline and diesel and burns more cleanly, is not yet widely used as a fuel for vehicles.

Standard natural gas storage systems use high-pressure natural gas that has been compressed to a pressure of 3600 pounds per square inch and bulky tanks that can take up the space of an entire car trunk. The carbon briquettes contain networks of pores and channels that can hold methane at a high density without the cost of extreme compression, ultimately storing the fuel at a pressure of only 500 pounds per square inch, the pressure found in natural gas pipelines.

The low pressure of 500 pounds per square inch is central for crafting the tank into any desired shape, so ultimately, fuel storage tanks could be thin-walled, slim, rectangular structures affixed to the underside of the car, not taking up room in the vehicle.

Pfeifer and his colleagues at MU and MRI discovered that that fractal pore spaces (spaces created by repetition of similar patterns at different scales) are remarkably efficient at storing natural gas.

"Our project is the first time a carbon storage material has been made from corncobs, an abundantly available waste product in the Midwest," said Pfeifer. "The carbon briquettes are made from the cobs that remain after the kernels have been harvested. The state of Missouri alone could supply the raw material for more than 10 million cars per year. It would be a unique opportunity to bring corn to the market for alternative fuels--corn kernels for ethanol production, and corncob for natural gas tanks."

The test pickup truck, part of a fleet of more than 200 natural gas vehicles operated by Kansas City, has been in use since mid-October and the researchers are monitoring the technology's performance, from mileage data to measurements of the stability of the briquettes.

In addition to efforts to commercialize the technology, the researchers are now focusing on the next generation briquette, one that will store more natural gas and cost less to produce. Pfeifer believes this next generation of briquette might even hold promise for storing hydrogen.

Natural Gas Vehicle Facts

Provided by the MU-MRI Collaboration

Natural gas is one of the cleanest burning alternative fuels available.

  • In light-duty applications, air emissions from natural gas vehicles are lower than emissions from gasoline-powered vehicles. Carbon monoxide and nitrogen oxides, smog-producing gases, are reduced by more than 90 percent and 60 percent, respectively. Carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, is reduced by 30 to 40 percent.
  • In medium- and heavy-duty applications, natural gas engines have shown a more than 90 percent reduction of carbon monoxide and particulate matter and a more than 50 percent reduction of nitrogen oxides, relative to commercial diesel engines.

Source: U.S. Department of Energy, Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Alternative Fuel Vehicles

Most natural gas used in the U.S. is domestically produced.

  • In 2004, U.S. net imports of natural gas represented only 15 percent of the total amount used, with almost all imports coming from Canada.

Source: U.S. Department of Energy, Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Alternative Fuel Vehicles

Natural gas is cheaper than gasoline and diesel on an energy-equivalent basis.

  • The national average cost of compressed natural gas (CNG) was 94 cents cheaper than gasoline on an energy-equivalent basis, according the Clean Cities Alternative Fuel Price Report in June 2006. Gasoline was $2.84 per gallon, diesel was $2.98 per gallon, and CNG was $1.90 per gasoline gallon equivalent (GGE).

Source: U.S. Department of Energy, Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy report,

Natural gas can be produced from renewable sources such as landfills.

  • As municipal solid waste decomposes, it produces carbon dioxide and methane. That methane, the principal component of natural gas, can be captured by landfill gas energy facilities and combusted for energy.

Source: Energy Information Administration,

  • Uncaptured methane is a greenhouse gas that is more than 20 times more potent than carbon dioxide.

Source: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Landfill Methane Outreach Program.

  • Capturing methane from all U.S. landfills is equivalent to removing the annual greenhouse-gas emission from 50 million cars, or planting forest on an area 2 times the area of Missouri every year, and could power 4 million homes or 4 million cars annually ("pollutant to renewable energy").

Sources: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Landfill Methane Outreach Program, and Additional calculations by Peter Pfeifer, MU professor of physics

Natural-gas fueled vehicles are functionally comparable to conventionally fueled vehicles.

  • Horsepower, acceleration and cruise speed in natural-gas-powered vehicles are comparable to equivalent conventionally fueled vehicles.
  • Approximately one of every five new U.S. transit buses is powered by natural gas.

Source: U.S. Department of Energy, Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Alternative Fuel Vehicles,

MU-MRI Low-Pressure Tank Facts

Provided by the MU-MRI Collaboration

  • The MU-MRI low-pressure natural gas tank uses carbon briquettes made from corncobs to store natural gas. The walls of the nanoporous carbon adsorb methane molecules as a high-density fluid. The strong attractive force in the narrow pores lowers the energy of the molecules so that they can be packed much more closely than in the absence of the carbon. Such a tank is called an adsorbed natural gas (ANG) tank.
  • The carbon briquettes can store 180 times their own volume of natural gas, or 118 g of methane per liter of carbon, at 500 pounds per square inch (psi). The best previous carbon could only store 142 times its own volume at 500 psi pressure. The target set by the U.S. Department of Energy is 180 times the storage a material's own volume. The MU-MRI carbon reaches this target for the first time.
  • A conventional high-pressure natural gas tank operates at 3600 pounds per square inch (psi), whereas this low-pressure tank operates at 500 psi. This enables flexibility in tank design because high-pressure tanks require bulky, cylindrical walls, whereas the low-pressure tank can use thinner walls in a variety of shapes. The pressure of 500 psi equals the pressure in natural gas pipelines, which eliminates costly compression of natural gas from 500 psi to 3600 psi in CNG tanks.
  • The technology being tested in this tank would enable car manufacturers to design long, slim, low-pressure tanks to replace the bulky high-pressure tanks in current natural gas vehicles. This would enable them to place the tank underneath the body of the car, whereas the high-pressure tanks are usually placed in a car's trunk, reducing vehicle cargo space.
  • Corncob is an abundant, low-cost, renewable raw material in the Midwest, allowing for production of ANG tanks from domestic sources. The state of Missouri alone could supply the raw material for ANG tanks of 10 million cars per year. Corn could thus serve the alternative fuel economy in two distinct ways--corn kernels for bioethanol production, and corncob for natural-gas tanks.

Source: Calculations by Peter Pfeifer, MU professor of physics, using data from the Corn Refiners Association.

Program Contacts
Sara B. Nerlove, NSF (703) 292-7077 snerlove@nsf.gov

Principal Investigators
Peter Pfeifer, University of Missouri - Columbia (573) 882-2335 pfeiferp@missouri.edu

Media Contacts
Joshua A. Chamot, NSF (703) 292-7730 jchamot@nsf.gov
Linda Cook, Midwest Research Institute (816) 360-1943 lcook@mriresearch.org
Katherine Kostiuk,
University of Missouri - Columbia (573) 882-3346 burgk@missouri.edu

The National Science Foundation (NSF) is solely responsible for the contents of this press release of February 16, 2007.

NSF Web Sites:
NSF Home Page: http://www.nsf.gov
NSF News: http://www.nsf.gov/news/

About the research collaboration: The MU-MRI collaborative is part of a larger cooperative effort called the Alliance for Collaborative Research in Alternative Fuel Technology (ALL-CRAFT), which includes as partners Lincoln University; DBHORNE, LLC; Renewable Alternatives, LLC; the Missouri Biotechnology Association; the Clean Vehicle Education Foundation; the Missouri Department of Natural Resources; and the City of Columbia, Mo. ALL-CRAFT also worked in cooperation with the Kansas City Regional Clean Cities Coalition (KCRCCC).

About PFI: This project was funded by a $600,000 grant from the National Science Foundation's program Partnerships for Innovation, which has the goal of stimulating the transformation of knowledge created by universities into innovations that create new wealth, build strong local, regional and national economies and improve the national well-being. Additional funds totaling more than $400,000 came from MU, MRI, the U.S. Department of Energy and the U.S. Department of Education.

A secondary goal of the Partnership for Innovation is to meet the broad workforce needs of the national innovation enterprise. The collaborative effort between MU and MRI has afforded a number of university students the opportunity to receive hands-on training for a career in research and development. As a result of the exchange, MRI recently hired an MU graduate and a Lincoln University graduate associated with the project team.

NOTE:

Links with detailed information are available on the Horizon Solutions Site:

The categories are:

Agriculture, Air Pollution, Biodiversity, Desertification, Energy, the Environment, Global Climate Change, Human Rights, Industry, Population, Poverty, Public Health, Sustainable Development, Transportation, Waste Management, Water, Organizations and Foundations, Research and Information, Web Directories and other Media, and Horizon Solutions Site Collaborators



Copyright 2003 HORIZON International. Yale University Department of Biology. P. O. Box 208103 New Haven, CT 06520-8103 USA. Tel: 203-432-6266, Fax: 203-432-6161. Email: info@solutions-site.org

Wednesday

Titan's Surface Organics Surpass Oil Reserves on Earth

This item may mean that at some future date, we will be importing our oil from Titan. How we get it from Saturn, to Low Earth Orbit, to the ground I leave to the more enlightened reader. It also says that there are significant reserves of Natural Gas (methane) on Titan as well. At Titan's distance from the sun, Natural gas is a liquid. This would make any exploitation fairly easy. Just pump the liquid methane out of the sea.

The CNG cars of today may represent a future where we would have our vehicles powered by methane. Again, the technology to get the resources from Titan to Earth would have to be worked out.

However, the prospect of organic compounds on Titan means that at the very least the possibility of life existing on Titan. This would render attempts to exploit any resources moot if we intend to exploit those resources without regard to those possible life forms. A sufficiently unscrupulous future government might have no such qualms.


Titan's Surface Organics Surpass Oil Reserves on Earth
02.13.08
Artist concept of terrain on Titan
An artist's imagination of hydrocarbon pools, icy and rocky terrain on the surface of Saturn's largest moon Titan. Image credit: Steven Hobbs (Brisbane, Queensland, Australia).
› Larger image

Saturn's orange moon Titan has hundreds of times more liquid hydrocarbons than all the known oil and natural gas reserves on Earth, according to new data from NASA's Cassini spacecraft. The hydrocarbons rain from the sky, collecting in vast deposits that form lakes and dunes.

The new findings from the study led by Ralph Lorenz, Cassini radar team member from the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, Laurel, Md., are reported in the Jan. 29 issue of the Geophysical Research Letters.

"Titan is just covered in carbon-bearing material -- it's a giant factory of organic chemicals," said Lorenz. "This vast carbon inventory is an important window into the geology and climate history of Titan."

At a balmy minus 179 degrees Celsius (minus 290 degrees Fahrenheit), Titan is a far cry from Earth. Instead of water, liquid hydrocarbons in the form of methane and ethane are present on the moon's surface, and tholins probably make up its dunes. The term "tholins"was coined by Carl Sagan in 1979 to describe the complex organic molecules at the heart of prebiotic chemistry.

Cassini has mapped about 20 percent of Titan's surface with radar. Several hundred lakes and seas have been observed, with each of several dozen estimated to contain more hydrocarbon liquid than Earth's oil and gas reserves. The dark dunes that run along the equator contain a volume of organics several hundred times larger than Earth's coal reserves.

Proven reserves of natural gas on Earth total 130 billion tons, enough to provide 300 times the amount of energy the entire United States uses annually for residential heating, cooling and lighting. Dozens of Titan's lakes individually have the equivalent of at least this much energy in the form of methane and ethane.

Part of an animation showing lakes on Titan
This movie, comprised of several detailed images taken by Cassini's radar instrument, shows bodies of liquid near Titan's north pole.

› Video and full caption

"This global estimate is based mostly on views of the lakes in the northern polar regions. We have assumed the south might be similar, but we really don't yet know how much liquid is there," said Lorenz. Cassini's radar has observed the south polar region only once, and only two small lakes were visible. Future observations of that area are planned during Cassini's proposed extended mission.

Scientists estimated Titan's lake depth by making some general assumptions based on lakes on Earth. They took the average area and depth of lakes on Earth, taking into account the nearby surroundings, like mountains. On Earth, the lake depth is often 10 times less than the height of nearby terrain.

"We also know that some lakes are more than 10 meters or so deep because they appear literally pitch-black to the radar. If they were shallow we'd see the bottom, and we don't," said Lorenz.

The question of how much liquid is on the surface is an important one because methane is a strong greenhouse gas on Titan as well as on Earth, but there is much more of it on Titan. If all the observed liquid on Titan is methane, it would only last a few million years, because as methane escapes into Titan's atmosphere, it breaks down and escapes into space. If the methane were to run out, Titan could become much colder. Scientists believe that methane might be supplied to the atmosphere by venting from the interior in cryovolcanic eruptions. If so, the amount of methane, and the temperature on Titan, may have fluctuated dramatically in Titan's past.

"We are carbon-based life, and understanding how far along the chain of complexity towards life that chemistry can go in an environment like Titan will be important in understanding the origins of life throughout the universe," added Lorenz.

Cassini's next radar flyby of Titan is on Feb. 22, when the radar instrument will observe the Huygens probe landing site.

For images and more information visit: http://www.nasa.gov/cassini and http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov .

The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, the European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, manages the Cassini-Huygens mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington. The Cassini orbiter was designed, developed and assembled at JPL. The radar instrument was built by JPL and the Italian Space Agency, working with team members from the United States and several European countries.

Carolina Martinez 818-354-9382
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
carolina.martinez@jpl.nasa.gov