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Transportation Issues
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US Cars and Drivers US Population: 300 million Licensed drivers 190 million Cars and light trucks. 210 million
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US Cars and Drivers We spend $20 out of every $100 of household $$ on our cars. Very little travel (2%) is by mass transit (buses and trains)
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Problems Air pollution Global Warming Oil Imports Gasoline Prices Future Oil Supplies
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What can we do?
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Transportation: Air Pollution
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Air Pollution – Sources
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Internal Combustion Engine
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Pollutants
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Photochemical Smog
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Ozone
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Acid Rain
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The Environmental Protection Agency
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Clean Air Acts 1955, 1963, 1970, 1990
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Clean Air Act of 1990
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Where are the problem areas?
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How are emission standards achieved?
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Catalytic Converter
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Command and Control Strategy
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Tailpipe Emissions Testing in Connecticut
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EPA Strategies Have Worked for Pollution Emission by cars. Even though vehicle miles increased by 150%, emission have substantially decreased.
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Cars also emit CO2
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Global Warming 20 lb CO2 emitted for every gallon of gasoline consumed. Transportation accounts for 25% of Global greenhouse gas emissions
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Beyond Gasoline: Drive Less
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Drive Less - Walk
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Drive Less - Bicycle
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Drive Less – Mass Transit
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Drive Less - Subway
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Drive Less - Carpool
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Drive Less – Urban Planning
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Drive Less – Summary Many people like flexibility and safety of cars Many people like suburbs. Mass transit systems requires large $$ investments. Will take many years to transform suburbs into “new towns” Part of the solution, but not the whole solution.
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Beyond Gasoline: Biofuels
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Ethanol
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Gasohol (E10)
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E85 – alternate fuel
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Flex Fuel Vehicle
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Brazil Sugar cane Gas stations have E25 or E100
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Ethanol from Cellulose
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Biodiesel
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Biodiesel Fuel Processed diesel fuel derived from biological sources. Used in unmodified diesel engines.
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Limitations B20 - unmodified diesel engines B100 - requires modifications Gelling problem
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Beyond Gasoline: Concept Cars
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EV Electric Cars have not been successful. Large heavy batteries Short driving range Slow refueling (recharging) process.
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GM EV-1 Produced by GM from 1996-199.
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Tesla Tesla Roadster may represent a new direction. Uses new lighter batteries. Expensive.
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GM Volt Li-Ion batteries and a gasoline engine. The gasoline engine will run a generator to recharge the batteries, but will not directly power the vehicle. (no gasoline motor)
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Fuel Cell Vehicles
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Internal Combustion Engine Engine – 20% efficient Only 20% of gasoline energy is converted to motion.
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Fuel Cells and the Hydrogen Economy Fuels Cells use hydrogen to produce electrical energy. They do not burn hydrogen. 2H 2 +O 2 2H 2 O + energy Fuel cells could be used to power cars with hydrogen as the fuel. Clean fuel
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Barriers to Hydrogen Cars Still in development Expensive On-vehicle storage of hydrogen fuel Availability of hydrogen fuel Infrastructure
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Hydrogen Sources Steam reforming of natural gas: CH 4 +2H 2 O CO 2 + 4H 2 Electrolysis: 2H 2 O + energy 2H 2 + O 2
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Energy Source for Electrolyzer Electrolysis requires energy. Energy could come from Solar, Nuclear, or Wind. In the short term, it would probably come from coal.
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Beyond Gasoline: Fuel Economy
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CAFE Standards Corporate Average Fuel Economy Mileage requirements for new vehicles
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Current CAFE Standards 27.5 mpg for passenger automobiles 20.7 mpg for light trucks & SUVs
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How do we make cars that use less gasoline? Reduce wind drag Reduce weight More efficient engines and drive trains
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Hybrid Electric Vehicle (HEV) Gasoline Engine Electric motor Does not need to be recharged
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Hybrid Electric Vehicle (HEV)
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Some Examples of 2008 Fuel Efficient Models
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Toyota Prius Sedan $22,200 Hybrid 48 mpg 110 hp
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Plug-In Hybrid (PHEV)
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Honda Civic Hybrid Sedan $22,600 Hybrid 45 mpg 110 hp
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Toyota Yaris Liftback Sedan $11,000 Gasoline 40 mpg 106hp
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Honda Fit 5-Door $13,900 Gasoline 37 mpg 109 hp
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Honda Civic EX Sedan $18,700 Gasoline 37 mpg 140 hp
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Ford Escape Hybrid SUV $26,000 Hybrid 30 mpg 230 hp
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How long does it take to change the US auto fleet? 210 million cars and light trucks in US 19 million new cars and trucks each year 200,000 new HEVs in 2005. Vehicles last 140,000 miles or 10 years Changing rolling stock takes several years.
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Policies – Feebate Extra fee to buy a gasoline SUV Rebate when buying a HEV Nissan Armada: 13 mpg
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Links http://www.nrel.gov/learning/re_biofuel s.html http://afdcmap2.nrel.gov/locator/FindPa ne.asp http://gm-volt.com/ http://world.honda.com/FuelCell/ http://www.fueleconomy.gov/
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