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Posts with tag DOD

Department of Defense testing O2Biodiesel at Nellis Air Force Base in Las Vegas

Filed under: Biodiesel, Diesel, Ethanol

If biodiesel is green and ethanol is green, then combining the two must be super-green! Or not... Anyway by combining ethanol with biodiesel and a "stabilizing agent", a company called O2Diesel is hoping to make diesel work more effectively for the Department of Defense in colder weather. We have shared with you past examples of their efforts. And now, word comes that a fuel known as O2Biodiesel, consisting of 28 percent renewable resources, is being demonstrated and tested at Nellis Air Force Base in Las Vegas. Hopefully, what happens in Vegas will not stay in Vegas, and the fuel will pass the tests and make it into more widespread use than the standard no2 diesel currently in use with the DOD.

[Source: O2Diesel via greencarcongress]

Big dollars for renewable military jet fuel research

Filed under: Transportation Alternatives



The U.S. Department of Defense's (DoD's) Defense-Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has awarded $5 million in funding to the Energy & Environmental Research Center (EERC) at the University of North Dakota to develop a bio-jet fuel for the U.S. military. The bio-jet fuel will need to be an identical replacement for JP-8 petroleum jet fuel which has been standardised on by the U.S. military to reduce the massive logistical burden of managing a variety of different fuel types across its divisions.

The military specification JP-8, which is derived from aviation fuel, was chosen as the basis of the U.S. armed forces standard military fuel because its easier to get a tank to run av-gas than it is to get a fighter bomber to run on unleaded petrol. JP-8 is now the majority of all fuel used in the U.S. military and runs Boeing B-52 bombers, Abrams A1 Battle Tanks, Apache Helicopters, and others. The fuel being developed by the EERC can operate in extremely cold temperatures, at or below -50 degrees F / -45 degrees C.

Energy security is driving the project with the aim to convert fuels from indigenous resources instead of being reliant on imported oil. The project will last for 18-months and will produce enough of the 100 percent domestic renewable fuel to allow DARPA to demonstrate the fuel's usability in real-world combat scenarios.

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[Source: Renewable Energy Access]

$300 million for alternative fuels instead of missiles?

Filed under: Etc.

An amendment has been submitted to the Fiscal Year 2007     Department of Defense authorization bill that would increase the use of alternative fuels in the military. House Democratic Whip Hoyer stresses the fact America is forced to take into account the price of oil when making national security decisions. The Department of Defense is the largest single buyer of fuel in America, and any move towards alternative fuels should have a significant impact. The Department of Defense should be able to bridge the gap between innovative research and practical application in the area of alternative fuels, an effort that would bring rewards to all of the United States. The $300 million in funding would be cut from $9.1 billion in proposed ballistic missile defense programs. How about we cut a slightly more generous portion for alternative fuels, and invest in a few less ballistic missiles?

[Source: Southern Maryland Online]

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