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Whisky-powered cars earn themselves a toast

By | August 19, 2010, 12:18 AM PDT

Biofuel additives like corn-based ethanol are baby steps in the alternative energy process. They’re often expensive (sometimes more expensive to produce than gasoline) and are nowhere near as environmentally friendly as other alternative fuels. It’s hard to get too excited about additives–except when they’re made from whisky.

That’s right, whisky. Scottish (where else?) researchers at Edinburgh Napier University have figured out a way to use the byproducts of their nation’s most famous beverage as biofuel, capable of running in any normal engine. Like some other biofuels, no modifications to the car are needed, making it an easily adopted, if not easily made or found, alternative.

During the making of whisky (in this case likely Scotch, rather than the more freedom-loving whisky of my own nation, the glorious amber elixir that is bourbon), two main byproducts are produced. “Pot ale” is the name for the leftover liquid in the stills, and “draff” is the leftover, used-up grains. Together, the pot ale and draff can be converted into butanol.

Butanol can actually be burned in typical gas engines, but due to its higher cost and difficulty in producing, it’s more likely to be added in smaller doses to regular gasoline–maybe 5% or 10%.

The great thing about this butanol is that it’s created from discarded products. Pot ale and draff is normally just thrown out, so to find a legitimate purpose for the material that can also lessen our dependency on oil is a great achievement.

Just as long as nobody practices the “one for you, one for me” game at the pump.

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Dan Nosowitz

About Dan Nosowitz

Dan Nosowtiz was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet in 2010.

Dan Nosowitz

Dan Nosowitz

Contributing Editor, Technology

Dan Nosowitz has written for Popular Science, Fast Company and Gizmodo. He holds a degree from McGill University in Canada. He is based in New York.

Follow him on Twitter.

Dan Nosowitz

Dan Nosowitz

Dan Nosowitz does not hold any investments in the technology companies he covers.

He writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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RE: Whisky-powered cars earn themselves a toast
Come to Minnesota, you can run your car on E85, that is 85% whiskey. However you will need a whiskey compatible engine to use it.
Posted by Willis@...
19th Aug 2010
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RE: Whisky-powered cars earn themselves a toast
This is an improvement over the "food for fuel" ethanol program we have in the States today. The latter was always an idiotic idea, driving up the price of food at a time when it is already rising too fast, providing too little fuel to even count as a useful baby step.

But I still have to doubt this new process is of much significance: there is a reason why butanol is normally limited to 5%, the article should have made mention of it: its melting point is too high (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butanol_fuel#Properties_of_common_fuels).
Posted by mejohnsn
19th Aug 2010
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Now This IS The Way For Renewable Fuel
Expect to see business jump on this bandwagon to improve their bottom line.

Rather than pay some company to cart off trash, it becomes fuel.

That's the type of innovation we need. Not some government bureaucracy forcing something down our collective throats, because bureaucrats gain more control and more votes and more money from it.
Posted by Albee_Freeoneday
19th Aug 2010
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Bit of a problem...
If the quantities are likely to be limited by "higher cost", doesn't that
sorta spoil the "something for nothing" argument?
Still, sounds interesting.
Posted by steve_jonesuk@...
20th Aug 2010
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This whisky option might also help the hungry a little
The cost of feeding the hungry in poor nations went up with increased ethanol production from corn. The one thing most people don't realise is that the biofuel ethanol has been used in the US for over half a century now. Since the early days of the illegal moonshine car delivery runs it was common for the moonshine runners to add some of their potent brew into their specially modified cars fuel system to give them a speed advantage over the police trying to catch them. The unofficial races the moonshine runners organised between themselves to prove who had the bragging rights of owning the fastest moonshine running car also lead to the modern top fuel drag racing cars that run on ethanol. That decades old proven track record as a reliable alternative fuel is why it has been given an advantage over some of the other alternate fuel options and at the expense of the higher cost of food to poor nations due to more crops being grown for making fuel than to be used for food!.
Posted by NZJester
20th Aug 2010
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RE: Whisky-powered cars earn themselves a toast
This made me think of something. We in South Africa have so much cheap wine (which are consumed by the kilo litres by the poorer part of our society), as well as by products off wine, that if we could get the qaulity of these by products more refined, we might just get these people to start working.
Posted by esterhnd
25th Aug 2010
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