| What is Biodiesel? |
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Biodiesel is a renewable substitute fuel for the mineral diesel sold at the filling stations today. It is made from vegetable or animal fats using a refinery much akin to a brewery:
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Organic fuels are derived from plant and animal oils. Mineral fuels are derived from the fossil remains of decomposed organic matter extracted from below the surface of the earth. Everyone knows that the Global resources of mineral oils are becoming depleted, and the cost of extracting the last reserves will rapidly escalate. There is an urgent need to find other forms of energy before mineral fuel supplies run out.
It is also well known that burning of fossil fuels increases the level of carbon-dioxide in the atmosphere as it causes the carbon locked within the earth's crust to be released into the atmosphere as exhaust gases. This is the main cause of the greenhouse effect in which the overall temperature of the globe increases as it becomes enveloped within a pool of carbon dioxide. The burning of fossil fuels is the main cause of global warming, a fact that is know well accepted by both politicians and scintists. All the time we burn petrol or mineral diesel we are therefore actively contributing to global disaster.
Biodiesel is the name for a variety of ester-based oxygenated fuels made from soybean oil or other vegetable oils or animal fats. The concept of using vegetable oil as a fuel dates back to 1895 when Dr. Rudolf Diesel developed the first diesel engine to run on vegetable oil. Diesel demonstrated his engine at the World Exhibition in Paris in 1900 using peanut oil as fuel.
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Organic fuels are derived from plant and animal oils. 