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10241024 | 3 years ago
Converting a car to also run on natural gas costs a few hundred dollars in South America / Europe but after that the benefits are:
- x2 cheaper travel expenses
- less harmful emissions
Since the US is rich in natural gas wouldn't it have been more environmentally conscious to convert the hundreds of millions of petrol cars to also run on natural gas instead of digging up tons of minerals for brand-new electric cars?
axiolite|3 years ago
There are many fleets which use natural gas. Municipal buses, city garbage trucks, etc. There, they only need to build up one (private) CNG refueling station in the city.
With a passenger car, you need to plan your trip to find public CNG fueling stations along the route where you need them.
The boom in natural gas production is a recent occurrence. Go back a couple decades and natural gas was far more expensive. Back then, propane was the obvious alternative to gasoline for vehicles, until the price for propane spiked and natural gas fell.
But more importantly, CNG is only a half-step forward, still leaving us dependent on a single fossil fuel. Battery electric vehicles are far more practical thanks to being easy to (slow-)charge almost anywhere, getting us off of fossil fuels entirely, reducing mechanical complexity/maintenance, and being far more efficient (burning the same amount of natural gas in a power plant to charge your BEV will give you far more range than burning it in your converted car engine).
panick21_|3 years ago
- First of all, there is no natural gas fuel standard
- Safety, there are no safety standards. If there were, tanks often used in other places, such an upgraded would be more expensive
- Rolling out refueling over the whole of the US/Europe would be difficult. Most places in Europe don't have these cars.
A better and safer alternative to natural gas would be methanol. And because of the US ethanol policy, the US already has a surprising amount of Flex Fuel Vehicles.
If you could have a bunch of fuel standards for ethanol/methanol and a vehicle standard for those fuels, depending on the price, people could buy different mixes.
Converting gas to methanol is fairly efficient and can be done directly at gas production sites, sometimes with gas that would be vented instead. But there isn't a big market for methanol right now.
In China such standards do exist M20 and so on. However sadly there methanol vehicles usually use methanol made by coal.
The US would have had much lower fuel cost if they had a strategy of methanol and ethanol at the same time, and require all vehicle to be FFV. Standardizing M20/E20, M50/E50 fuels for example.
However all of this is now no longer very useful as car market is rapidly switching to electric.
For some trucks using generated fuel might be useful. Dimethyl ether would be great for long range trucks and ships rather then hydrogen.
marcosdumay|3 years ago
The US car market does not seem very concerned with economical ROI, so any argument based on costs is useless. The emissions part seems to hold for some people, but electric cars already won here.
Even here on South America gas is getting out of fashion, replaced by electricity. The costs are still high enough that there is a large market remaining, but it is constantly decreasing.
bluGill|3 years ago
For every public natural gas pump I know of, I know of 50 public EV chargers. Plus in the worst case you can plug an EV into a regular outlet (overnight you can get enough range to get someplace with a faster charger).
saberdancer|3 years ago
Obvious problem in USA is availability of natural gas at gas stations, but that is a chicken and an egg problem - would be solved with more demand.
MrMan|3 years ago
VBprogrammer|3 years ago
_fizz_buzz_|3 years ago
Neil44|3 years ago