Transportation in the 21st Century

By Reid Gustin, Brian Rodde         

 

The current outlook for oil production on a worldwide scale is not good.  As early as the summer of 1999, oil producers are expecting gasoline prices to start rising rapidly.  The global oil glut that was a result of searching and finding new oil fields during the 1970’s is finally coming to an end, as fewer and fewer new fields are being found.  Many experts flatly state that there are no more major oil fields to be found.  Also, we will eventually start to run out of crude petroleum from the fields we are currently drilling in, as our recovery rates for oil fields are currently around 50%.  This will result in higher and higher prices for the gasoline being sold, and hopefully will result in more and more efficient automobiles being produced.  Currently, with new sales of sport utility vehicles and other light trucks edging out cars as a percentage of total auto sales, the low gasoline prices have been a major problem.  With the average sport utility vehicle getting no more than eighteen miles per gallon, and the average compact car getting upwards of thirty five, low gas prices have led to a consumer attitude that a gas-guzzling light truck is as good or better than an ultra-efficient compact car.  In order for the oil currently in reserves and the oil we expect to find within the next twenty years not to be depleted at a rate higher than production, more and more efficient cars must be used, and the exemptions for the gas-guzzling cars must be removed.  Currently, a truck over 5000 pounds is exempt from emissions and mileage restrictions in many states.  The laws were seen as a break for the working man, as when they were written, sport utility vehicles didn’t really exist yet, and a work force laborer with a pickup truck could generally use a break on emissions rules for his truck.  Moving into the 21st century, we need to realize that it is not the working man who owns a sport utility vehicle:  they are too expensive to buy, and use to much gas.

            First, the basic problem.  In the late 1970’s, when Iran and Iraq were engaged in political arguments, and then a war, the rest of the world scrambled to find oil outside of the Persian Gulf.  Oil surged to $40 per barrel (as compared to $13 or so today) and new oil fields were found.  At least, some new oil fields were found.  Engineers promised a huge number of new fields were out there, but  the peak year for finding new major oil fields was 1962.  Since then, global discovery has dropped sharply, in all regions.  Petroleum exploration, as a procedure, is very efficient.  The technology is very advanced, and suits it’s purpose well.  The current method for finding oil fields is to locate a basin, or general area where oil might be found.  Next, a small, man-made virtual earthquake is produced by slamming a projectile into the ground.  This sends seismic lines across the oil basin, and the echo signature can be used to find pockets of liquid or other mineral deposits.  The only thing left is to tap the oil field, and the field has been fully discovered.  Unfortunately, the fact is that the largest oil field in a given basin will also be the easiest to find.  Consequently, the largest oil fields were found very early in the exploration process.  For obvious reasons, the oil companies always chose to drill on the biggest oil field in an area, meaning that occasionally some of the current fields will have a smaller pocket of oil, a secondary field of sorts, but nowhere near as substantial as the main field an oil company will focus on for oil drilling.  Even if all of these secondary fields are exploited, the oil depletion curve will only be moved back a few years; we certainly won't be able to count on smaller oil fields for a period longer than fifteen years.

            Today, there is no area on earth where petroleum exploration cannot take place if geological studies show a decent chance of finding significant petroleum fields.  Even deep-water drilling is a possibility, though exploration is more complicated.  It is fortunate that we can drill in these areas, because the only two unexploited areas with possible oil resources are in arctic climates like Russians Siberia, and in deep oceanic shelves like those off the eastern coast of South America.  Still, as compared to the amount of oil in fields over the rest of the world, the oil in these unexplored regions should account to no more than 5% of supply.

            So, in the late 1970s, very few of the promised major oil fields were found.  Most of the regions on earth where petroleum was likely to be found had already been located, and the significant majority of the fields in those regions had been found.  In fact, no new oil regions with major oil resources have been found since 1980.  We have been depending on the same general areas for our oil during the entire history of oil exploration and use.  There are 1311 major and giant oil fields, which contain 94% of the world's known oil, and are therefore the most important for future global oil supplies, or the lack thereof.  The vast majority of the giant fields are located in five middle eastern countries: Abu Dhabi, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia.  There are, however, major fields (being the next category smaller than giant fields, the largest) across the seven continents, and off the shores of all of them.

            Modern three-dimensional seismic and horizontal drilling techniques improved current oil recovery in known fields, but made no substantial change in global reserves of discoveries of new major fields.  When the world oil prices dropped sharply in 1986, searching for new oil fields was almost stopped.  Oil companies felt that it was far more cost effective to simply try to improve recovery in the fields they were currently using.  New techniques arose, but the amount of reserves left in those fields already found certainly did not change.  By 1989, all major world petroleum exploration companies were downsizing or eliminating their geological and geophysical staffs.  Money for exploration and discovery began to be much more limited, with only the prime prospects being looked at. 

            A distinction must now be made between oil reserves and oil resources.  Oil reserves are engineers conservative opinions of how much oil is known to be producible, within a known time, with known techniques, at known costs, in known fields.  They are the quantity of oil that an oil company or a country can get their hands on within a reasonable amount of time.  The oil must be reachable with a current technology, not with something “in the works,” or soon to become available.  Additionally, reserves must be located in the actual oil field in which the company is currently drilling.  Reserves do not count oil known to exist but not currently being drilled, as the setup time on a new drill is substantial.  Once a drill is set up, then the new field becomes part of reserves, and can be counted with numbers for that particular fields reserves.  Oil reserves are conservative enough that a bank will loan money based on reserves.  Oil resources, on the other hand, are geologists optimistic opinions of all undiscovered oil theoretically present in an area.  It is all the oil thought to be in a region.  For example, if a geologist looks at the geological makeup of a region and believes that there could be substantial amounts of oil in that particular location, he makes an estimate as to how much oil is actually there and that number becomes part of the oil resources count.  Obviously, this number is subject to a great deal of estimation, as well as personal opinion.  Banks will not loan money based on oil resources.

            The drop in exploration funds means that oil resources will likely never be converted into oil reserves.  For example, in Russia, there are huge areas where oil resources are thought to exist, but the huge amount of money going into oil production in the last couple of years went instead to increasing efficiency of current production areas.  It is commonly thought that Siberia holds substantial oil pockets created before the area was encased in permafrost.  The Russian government, however, has decided that it would be far more effective to try and increase recovery in current fields than to search for new ones.  This region in Siberia is extremely hostile to humans, and the costs associated with setting up and manning any number of oil drills would be huge.  Alternatively, by increasing recovery in current wells by only a small percent, a huge amount of oil that was previously unavailable comes into the driller’s hands.  In America, petroleum engineers also are being used to get more oil out of current fields, rather than exploring for new fields.  With current drilling techniques, approximately 50% of the oil in a field can be extracted.  That number is up from 30% less than thirty years ago, and could certainly rise in the near future.  However, even if oil companies raise this number to 70% or even 80%, the patterns of oil depletion will certainly continue, only with a longer time-frame.  With global demand for oil soaring currently, a 5% rise in recovery techniques would give no more than 7 years to the date when oil demand would race past oil production.

            Another problem with public knowledge, or lack thereof, of oil reserves is that scientists and government reporters are reporting inactive reserves along with active reserves.  If the government believes it has a twenty year oil reserve, chances are that a significant portion of that reserve is inactive, meaning that it is known to exist, but is not considered producible within the foreseeable future with current production methods.  Often, these inactive reserves are seen by the oil companies only as oil resources, but governments call them oil reserves to inflate their numbers.  Counted as inactive reserves would be, for example, the additional 5% increase in recovery from a field if technology to make this increase was expected to arrive within the next year or so.  A government might look at it as though the imminent technology were as good as here, and count the additional oil as already a part of reserves.  Alternatively, the oil companies would look at the extra oil as oil resources, as they still would be unable to retrieve it with current production methods.  Oil companies are in business for profit, and are generally very realistic as far as innovations go.  It would be likely that they would be skeptical about the new recovery technique until it had been proven as effective and efficient.  As oil companies are in business to make money, they also will not work to exploit inactive reserves until active reserves start to fall behind, as it would earn a division of resources that they tend to find unacceptable.  The extra effort to keep another drill or pump going at the same time means a depletion of capital that they will not let happen.

            Government petroleum production ministries also have an interest in announcing the best possible reserve estimates, because they are useful for national prestige, in negotiations for OPEC production quotas, World Bank loans and grants, and so on.  Because of this, political reserve estimates tend to be very high, in effect lulling the public and politicians into complacency.  Consequently, even the shrinking reserves reported by some countries may be inflated for political reasons.  Other countries simply continue to quote the exact same number year after year.  China, for instance, has reported the exact same reserve number for the last fifteen years, even though they have continued to drill the oil, meaning that some of it has to have been used up.  They do this so that the reserves are counted towards national assets, meaning that it is something against which the government could take a loan if it became necessary.

            So, where do falling oil reserves leave us?  By the year 2000, the global population will be half again as much as it was in 1975, nearly seven billion people, with a corresponding increase in demand for crude oil.  Industrializing nations such as China and India, both with enormous populations, will start to compete with Western nations for world crude oil exports.  The U.S. Geological Survey statistics show that the worlds oil production might peak by the year 2010, after which the oil fields will begin to decline rapidly.  With a growing global population, and oil reserves that will begin to shrink, oil will begin to rise exponentially in price, and automobile gasoline will become extremely expensive.  By 2050, oil production will be a small fraction of what it is today.  Global public demand will begin to exceed supply from the Persian Gulf exporters as early as 2010 if political affairs remain in their current state, and it could even be as early as the year 2000 if Saudi Arabia, the principle petroleum exporter, has serious political problems that effect oil exports.  The question now is only when the permanent oil crunch will come.

            Even with questionable numbers reported by some countries, such as China and Iraq, estimates can be made for when countries will begin to enter the depletion stage, where petroleum production falls behind.  Geologists speak of this stage as the “midpoint,” where the production function begins to decline rapidly.  China, for example, is expected to peak around the year 2000, while Mexico and Columbia are expected to peak in the next year.  These numbers, however, are based upon what the governments of these countries report as their numbers, as no confirmation can be obtained.  Also, this does assume that Abu Dhabi, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia continue to produce at current levels, with no disruptions.  The world oil situation is tenuous at best, and relies on a huge number of variables and relationships between countries remaining friendly.  At any given point, the middle eastern countries could decide to close off oil exports to the rest of the world if relations break down.  Obviously, this would have an enormous impact on the world economy, and near-chaos would ensue.  However, if relations with these countries remain normal, the pandemonium around a real oil crunch will still occur, only at a later point in time than if the oil exporters sealed oil sales.  Clearly, another method of fuel for the worlds energy needs must be found, whether a temporary solution, such as natural gas, or a renewable solution such as methanol.     After oil is depleted for practical purposes, gas will come into play.  In barrels of oil equivalent (boe), there is 1 trillion boe worth of gas that can be produced for fuel.  This is compared with 1.8 trillion boe for conventional petroleum.  Gas, however, must be sealed into the ground, either by cold or by salt, in order for pockets to be found, so the locations where gas can be found are much less scattered than those for oil.  In the near future, more deep water oil and gas (greater than 500 m water depth) will come into play.  Hopefully, there will be some oil produced from new finds in the Arctic, and recovery methods are advancing to a certain extent.  It is currently estimated that an oil producer can get 50% of the oil out of an oil field; that is, 50% can be retrieved and processed.  As technology advances, this may rise to 60% or further, but the depletion patterns currently in place will not disappear, they will only be moved back a few years.

            This is the current oil situation.  We are, in fact, running out of retrievable oil that we can process into the fuels used so extensively today.  To add insult to injury, we also have issues with the cars currently being used in America, as well as the rest of the world.  In 1998, Sport Utility Vehicles (SUV's) made up 51% of new vehicles sold, the first time light trucks have ever sold more new models than smaller cars have.  There is clearly a need for action as far as transportation goes.  In addition to the gas consumption worries, the pollution emitted from these vehicles are far worse than that from most other new cars.  Motor vehicles account for a fourth of all U.S. emissions of carbon dioxide, the chief cause of global warming.  Policy makers therefore focus on cars as a way to reduce carbon emissions.  For good reason: U.S. vehicles emit more carbon dioxide than all combustion sources in any other single country (except China, Russia, and Japan).  Short-term, the outlook is bad.  The efficiency of new vehicles has been on the decline for ten years due to steady fuel economy standards and increasing sales of inefficient pickups, mini vans, and SUVs.  Even though technology for cleaner cars exists, these enormous sport utility vehicles do not take advantage of that technology, and generally get fifteen to twenty miles per gallon, as compared to 35 to 40 for a conventional compact car.  In addition, vehicle miles are increasing while the proportion of commuters taking public transport steadily declines.  With oil prices reaching record lows, consumers are not looking for efficiency, or cutting back on miles driven.  If no action is taken, transportation will continue to be the single largest source of carbon emissions in the U.S.  Fortunately, as oil production falls, the price of oil per barrel will begin to rise, meaning that consumers will not want to spend more money for the privilege of buying greater quantities of more expensive gas.  This will create a demand on automakers to start making more and more efficient vehicles, and to cut back on production of SUVs, which will almost certainly have a declining demand.

            In the near future, closing loopholes that permit light trucks to pollute more than cars and improving the fuel economy of all vehicles will be absolutely crucial.  California is currently taking action, but large cuts in carbon emissions and air pollution require that automakers rapidly introduce vehicles that give a huge jump in environmental performance.  Over the next ten to twenty years, alternative fuels like hydrogen, ethanol, and methanol manufactured from renewable sources can provide additional air quality gains while virtually eliminating carbon emissions.  And reducing driving altogether, which ultimately requires shifts in travel and housing patterns, is vital to the eventual shift towards a sustainable transportation future.  However, these social changes are in the further future than our oil crunch.  Very shortly, the world is going to have to make drastic changes in the way it consumes petroleum, and automobiles are the first thing that we need to change. 

            Without any action, carbon emissions from passenger vehicles will rise 20% to 35% over early 1990s levels by the year 2010.  Instead, there have been estimates that emissions could be 13% lower in 2010.  So, instead of actually decreasing our emissions from automobiles, we will actually be increasing them by a third to a fifth.  With emissions already bad, adding an extra 30% onto them could make for even more serious need for pollution controls.  To make matters worse, there are a large number of technology advances coming into play in the next few years that could make emissions far lower.  By 2030, when the full group in environmentally friendly innovations come into existence, carbon emissions could be more than 60% lower.  There has been, not surprisingly, a reaction from automakers stating that “the U.S. can expect soaring production costs and significantly higher driving costs,” as Andrew Card, CEO of the American Automobile Manufacturers Association put it, due to a move towards more efficient vehicles.  Environmental groups, however, claim that drivers in the U.S. alone could save more than $4 billion per year because of lower fuel bills from relatively low-cost efficiency improvements.  Yet without stronger regulatory pressure or overwhelming consumer demand, automakers have little incentive to bring cost-effective, highly efficient cars to market.  Currently, profit drives the automakers, and SUVs bring in huge profits.  Margins are very high on these vehicles, because they don't require a great deal of research and development to bring them to the front line.  The current trend in sport utility vehicles is toward bigger and even less efficient vehicles.  Ford is currently planning to bring out its biggest, and the biggest ever sport utility vehicle, the Excursion.  The excursion is planned to be more than 19 feet long, more than a foot longer than a parking space in most cities.  More importantly, the Excursion will get around 10 miles per gallon, rising to almost 15 when cruising on highways. 

            California, facing federally required emission reductions by the year 2010, adopted regulations that make them the first to force most SUVs, pickups, and mini vans to meet the same pollution standards as regular cars.  The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is expected to closely examine the new rules, and may follow California's lead when drawing up nationwide regulations.  Twenty-five million vehicles are on the roads of California.  Half of these, as in the rest of the nation, are SUVs, or light trucks.  Exempt by weight from more stringent car-pollution standards, they produce three-fourths of vehicle emissions in California, which has seven of the ten areas in the United States with the highest readings of ozone.

            The new rules apply only to new cars sold starting in 2004 and will be phased in through 2010, with reevaluations scheduled every two years.  The rules would expand passenger car emission standards to all vehicles that weigh up to 8,500 pounds.  That will include about 90% of SUVs, and most pickups and mini vans.  While major car manufacturers were disappointed, the Air Resources Board showed that the costs could be far less than anticipated.  While car manufacturers claimed it might cost “thousands per vehicle” to meet the new standards, the Air Resources Board showed a 1998 Ford Explorer that had been converted to meet to new standards for about $200.  Unfortunately for the oil depletion problem, most of the new fixes in efficiency controls focus solely on emissions.  While carbon emissions must be controlled to maintain our quality of air, an automobile can be converted to meet the new standards while still getting terrible gas mileage.

            Clearly there will eventually have to be a shift away from petroleum using vehicles, or at least a huge jump in efficiency, but a clear start towards higher efficiency is very strict controls on sport utility vehicles, and an increasing gas mileage standard for all cars.  It should not be particularly difficult to require a car to get a certain number of miles per gallon.  Even an rule saying that all cars must get 20 miles per gallon would certainly help the immediate oil depletion situation, as it might push the depletion timeframe back a few more years.  While a temporary fix to be sure, it would help in the short run.  There are a number of new technologies for increasing fuel efficiency, including ethanol, methanol, and battery powered cars, but these currently all hold negatives that will hamper their acceptance by the public.  One alternative with none of these negatives is a hybrid car, that combines a small gas motor with a battery for very efficient operation                         

            Now that we've discussed what’s wrong with conventional cars and the problems they create, we will discuss some possible solutions. The most commonly talked about is the electric car, other solutions include buses, solar cars, alternative fuel sources, and even bullet trains. While all of these are good ideas and could be seen as steps in the right direction, the key to alleviating the problems associated with modern transportation will rely heavily upon the hybrid car. This car of the future is part conventional car, part electric car and is guaranteed to change the way we travel in the decades to come.

            It is commonly believed, and correctly so, that people are unwilling to abandon their personal automobiles. People have just grown too attached to the comfort and convenience cars  provide to give it all up for some form of mass transportation. That is why for all intention purposes the best way to relieve pollution will be to improve conventional cars, instead of looking at other forms of transportation. Therefore, mass transportation will not be looked at as a realistic option and will not be discussed in the following pages.

 

Electric Vehicles

 

            Long thought of as the wave of the future a purely electric car (one that operates on electricity alone) is actually not as efficient as once thought. Electric vehicles boast very clear benefits over the conventional car, foremost among those is its lowered emissions. An electric vehicle draws its power from a conventional 220 volt power outlet. Therefore, any comparison of pollutants means comparing a cars emissions with the byproducts of producing electricity. A car will emit twice the amount of nitrogen oxides as will a power plant producing the energy to charge a comparable electric vehicle. Moreover, a conventional car will create 60 times more carbon monoxide, 30 times more volatile organic compounds and twice the carbon dioxide emissions as the electric power plant. These statistics are based on power plants that operate oil and natural gas fired generators and so don’t even take into account the fact that even cleaner alternative energy sources are available including solar, hydro and wind power.

            To better understand the benefits and drawbacks of  electric vehicles we’ll take a closer look at the most widely available electric vehicle, which is the EV1 made by Saturn. The EV1 looks like your typical car until you look under the hood or drive it. Under the hood is a lead acid battery pack consisting of 26 12-volt modules, which are capable of carrying 16.3 kilowatt hours of energy. When driving the EV1 the first thing you will notice is that it has no key to turn the ignition, instead it has a number combination that is punched into a key pad to turn on the car. Once the car is turned on it is ready to go although most people think something has gone wrong because there is no sound. This is because the EV1 is virtually silent due to the fact it has no internal combustion engine. It handles as well as most cars on the road and actually accelerates better than most boasting a 0-60mph time of 8 seconds. The EV1 also comes with the amenities you would expect of your average car air conditioning, radio, etc.

            However, the EV1 like most electric cars has a few key obstacles holding it back. The first of which is that it must be recharged, which takes approximately 3 hours. The other major hurdle is the range of the EV1 which at present time is between 50-90 miles. As you can see both of these facts are major drawbacks, the recharging because it takes so long and the range because so short a distance can be traveled on any single outing. Additionally, batteries themselves are highly reactive chemical pollutants.

 

Hybrid Vehicles

 

            Because of the challenges currently facing electric cars, hybrid cars seem like a more practical application of advanced electric vehicle technology. Hybrid cars combine both the electric vehicle and the conventional car to form a better, more efficient vehicle. Many models are still in development, while others are currently being tested. However, there is one model that has made it to market albeit not in the U.S.

            The engineering department at UC Davis has been developing a hybrid model of the Ford Taurus. It utilizes both gasoline and electricity, gets nearly 70 miles per gallon and has nearly 80% fewer emissions than a stock Taurus. However, it still requires a recharging, although only every 1,000 miles. An on board computer determines which energy source to draw from. For short distances or stop and go driving the car runs on electricity. For longer distances the gasoline engine kicks in, aided by the electric motor. Its developers feel that, the adoption of this technology is inevitable. Its the only way well meet emission standards and fuel economy without sacrificing performance.             Currently being tested is a 40 foot, 36 passenger hybrid passenger bus. Instead of running on diesel the bus carries an on board generator that runs on propane. This generator is continuously recharging battery packs that are in the rear of the bus, this in turn enables  the bus to travel about 200 miles at a time. The Bay Area Air Quality Management has also determined that the hybrid bus spews out at least 50% fewer emissions than a conventional diesel bus. While a hybrid bus would cost more to produce, in the long term it would actually be cheaper because its maintenance and operating costs would be lower.

            Alas, there is a hybrid car that is in mass production and has few if any problems. It is the Prius made by Toyota and modeled after the best selling Toyota Corolla. It gets great gas mileage, has extremely low emissions and doesn’t ever have to be plugged in to an electrical outlet. It is currently available in Japan, where it sells for approximately $17,000 U.S. dollars. While as of yet unavailable in the U.S. it should make its way here sometime in the year 2000. The Prius gets about 66 miles per gallon which comes out to about 800 miles on a single tank of a gas. The reason for the Prius superior efficiency is the fact that it has both electric and motor engine capabilities. Having both energy sources available allows it to draw from its electric motor when the car is stopped and a gas engine would be at its most inefficient. Conversely when an electric motor is not able to provide enough power, like when climbing a hill, the motor engine will kick in and provide the missing power. Furthermore, Toyota’s system diverts output from the generator to recharge the batteries whenever they are low and a regenerative braking system recovers energy from the wheels during downhill driving and braking and uses it to generate electricity. No other charging is ever necessary for the batteries.

            Honda also has a product available for California’s low-pollution road race, due next year. It’s a hybrid gas and electric car  that gets 70 miles to a gallon of gas and has a range of 600 miles between fuel stops.            With its electric-motor boost and relatively light body weight (1,740 pounds), the auto meets California’s ultra low emission standard. With a three-cylinder gasoline motor and five-speed manual transmission, Honda says, the car can match the performance of a traditional four-cylinder 1.5 liter engine - and with less pollution and higher gas mileage.

       Similarly to the Prius, the electric motor kicks in when the car needs to accelerate, when starting out from a stop light, climbing a hill or passing a truck. The battery is recharged when the car’s brakes are used. 

       Hybrid cars still pollute a little bit, but they are a big improvement over the lowest emission gas-powered vehicles now on U.S. roads. Further refinements could improve performance and cut pollution even more. Additionally, mass production will drive down costs, and consumers should be willing to spend a little more for a thrifty car that goes twice or three times as far on a gallon of gas.

 

Alternative Fuel Sources.    

 

Our dependence upon foreign oil and the diminishing amount of oil in existence has given rise to a search for alternative fuel sources, foremost among these is ethanol. Ethanol is a renewable, clean-burning, domestic fuel that has the potential to displace foreign oil and will allow the U.S. to still meet its energy demand. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Ethanol is the most energy efficient of all liquid transportation fuels.  

Ethanol is produced by converting the starch content of biomass feed stocks (e.g. corn, potatoes, beets, sugar cane, wheat) into alcohol. The fermentation process is essentially the same process used to make alcoholic beverages—yeast and heat are used to break down complex sugars into more simple sugars, creating ethanol. Currently, about 1.5 billion gallons of ethanol are produced this way each year in the U.S.

            Biomass is America’s secret renewable energy resource. Thousands of opportunities exist across the country to capture the energy in this vastly underutilized resource. Not only can biomass energy help reduce waste and clean up the environment, it can also provide new and better jobs for rural America. Biomass has not entered the market more widely because fossil fuels have been cheaper.  However, valuing the environmental benefits of biomass or the negative impacts of fossil fuels more highly will allow biomass to compete economically and provide a greater portion of the U.S. energy supply in the 21st. century. 

      There is a relatively new process to produce ethanol which utilizes the cellulosic portion of biomass feed stocks like trees, grasses and agricultural wastes. Cellulose is another form of carbohydrate and can be broken down into more simple sugars. This process is relatively new and is not yet commercially available, but potentially can use a much wider variety of abundant, inexpensive feed stocks.

            For those who think its unrealistic to change our gas guzzlers into clean running vehicles we need look no further than Brazil to find that it is indeed possible. It is there that ethanol has been used since 1939 and where currently 40% of the cars are ethanol powered vehicles. In addition ethanol has not only helped their environment but their economy as well. While the environmental benefits of ethanol are clear, ethanol also reduced Brazils dependence on foreign oil and also provided valuable, new markets for its sugar cane producers.

            Our strategy for the future should include the combination of hybrid cars with a more efficient fuel source such as ethanol. This will help overcome many of the hurdles facing modern transportation.

 

Future Possibilities

 

            This combination of a cleaner more efficient fuel used in conjunction with a hybrid car is definitely the wave of the future, however, even further down the road there may be even more effective means of combating the problems facing us. These include some ideas already in the works, including a hydrogen fueled car and an air powered car.

            The idea behind the hydrogen powered car is that fuel cells will use hydrogen to generate electricity through an electrochemical process. The only byproduct of the process would be protons which combined with air would form water. In the past obtaining hydrogen for commercial use appeared to be the biggest obstacle facing the hydrogen powered car, however, scientists have come up with a means of extracting hydrogen from various fuels including methanol and gasoline. The pollutants from this extraction would be half the number a typical car emits today. Furthermore, a hydrogen powered car could go much further on a gallon of gas than could a conventional car, because the gas would be used only to produce hydrogen to run the fuel cell.

             Also in the works, as far fetched as it sounds is an air powered car. The idea is that air fed into an expander would drive a shaft that would turns the wheels, much like an old steam engine. If this vehicle ever came to be it would be completely emission free, only releasing air that was colder than it was before. The range on such a car would still be very short, 60 miles, however with even a small internal combustion engine that range could increase to 200 miles while still having near zero emissions. This air powered car has also paved the way for a very similar vehicle that runs on liquid nitrogen. While both these ideas may seem unrealistic, they are meant to show you just how many options are out there and how crucial research and development is.

 

Automaker Reluctance

 

            Despite all the progress being made in the automotive industry, nothing will come of it until the consumer decides to turn in his gas guzzler for a more efficient vehicle. Unfortunately this transition may be slow to occur if the 1999 North American International Auto Show is any indication. On the positive end, Energy Secretary Bill Richardson announced $20 million in grants to research companies that are developing electric power that can be used in electric, hybrid and fuel cell vehicles. However, while electric  and hybrid vehicles were on display at this show, also unveiled were three more SUVs guaranteed to pollute our air and increase inefficiency.

            Perhaps the most intimidating problem facing hybrid cars at this point are car manufacturers themselves. Most major American automakers are reluctant to put any capital or any resources at all into the development of a hybrid car, The Japanese on the other hand realize that in the future there will be a market built of necessity that requires far more efficient vehicles than the ones available today. Detroit must come to realize that this market is nearly upon us and that they need a product to sell. Furthermore, U.S. auto manufacturers should recognize that they won’t need to overhaul their current assembly lines. This is because hybrid cars can be built using the same methods currently in place.

            Marketing hybrid cars should not be perceived as difficult because, once hybrid cars start being produced and driven their advantages will become obvious and the need for  conventional cars will slowly die out, and hopefully take their pollution with them. Hybrid cars are not only more environmentally sound, but they are cheaper to operate and maintain than conventional cars. While the flood of SUVs on the auto market may be seen as an obstacle to the emergence of hybrid cars, there is no reason to believe that SUV models of hybrid cars could not be made. Additionally, the price of gas is expected to greatly increase in the coming years, that is further incentive to switch from conventional cars to the far more fuel efficient hybrid car