Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Trident Inceni Sports Car with Biodiesel Fuel

In the marketplace for a sports car? Than look no farther than the new British-born Trident Inceni, a biodiesel powered "supercar". The Trident Inceni car will be officially exposed in the Cholmondeley Festival of Power in Cheshire, Britain being held July 15-17, 2011. The event is a showcase of performance and power that includes car racing, power ship racing, aerobatics, and army action. The two-seater super car can travel up to one hundred miles on a single gallon of fuel and up to two thousand miles on a full tank. The company credits its remarkable gas mileage on its patent protected technology called torque multiplication. The Trident Inceni can reach speeds of at least two hundred miles per hour. It sports a 6.6 litre V8 turbodiesel giving it enough power to go from 0-60 miles per hour in four seconds.

According to the company, this "flex-fuel" sports car can run on any mix of biodiesel including B100. What might this beauty set you back? An insignificant $150,000 but think about all of the money you can save in fuel.

In the Cholmondeley Competition of Power, the Trident Inceni will show off its wares during a few on-track performances booked to happen across the event.

Monday, July 4, 2011

Petrobras purchased a biodiesel plant in Rio Grande do Sul

Petrobras purchased a biodiesel plant in Rio Grande do Sul found next to a fuel distribution base and a railroad terminal for receiving grain and shipping fuel. The plant uses integrated plant oil extraction and produces about 42 million gallons biodiesel yearly. Last week, Petrobas' controlled subsidiary Petrobras Biocombustvel S.A.

Pbio purchased a fifty percent percentage in BSBIOS Indstria e Comrcio de Biodiesel Sul Brasil S.A, which owns the biodiesel plant, for roughly $128 million. Petrobras claimed the purchase will consolidate its position in the domestic biofuels sector.

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Biodiesel Fuel Discount from Dixon Energy

Dixon energy offers municipalities, college districts and companies with serious diesel use, that as their fuel contracts come up for summer renewal, Dixon is offering heavy volume reductions to fleets to urge them to use this clean-burning alternative.

Biodiesel is the alternative fuel of preference produced from domestic, replaceable resources like plant oils, animal fats, used cooking oil and even new sources like algae. Dixon Energy installed the 1st biodiesel pump in Morris County in 2009, and it is still the only one in the area. It isn't only preferred for "green" reasons by many ( biodiesel has less emissions ), biodiesel fuel also improves engine power performance due to natural lubricants ( which also decreases upkeep costs ), and burns more fully than regular diesel fuel.

It doesn't contain any petrol, and can be mixed at any level with petrol diesel to form a biodiesel mix. Now Dixon offers biodiesel mixes up to twenty p.c. ( B5, B10, B20 ). It may be employed in compression-ignition ( diesel ) engines with little alterations. Essentially, it is easy to use, bio-degradable, non-poisonous, and fundamentally freed from sulfur and aromatics. According to Dixon's Sales Boss David Leavitt, "Our Biodiesel Pump in Rockaway is an element of our dedication to offering top of the range, cost-saving, green energy options to the area. It is open from six hundred AM - eleven PM, and provides ecologically friendly diesel fuel for contractors, lorry drivers, all commercial purchasers of diesel fuel in addition to any and all ( non-commercial ) diesel-powered automobiles." Leavitt added that fleets of diesel vehicles can exploit the volume rebates Dixon now offers. Dixon Energy has been serving Morris and Sussex counties for at least 120 years. As well as the biodiesel pump at ninety nine Cobb St in Rockaway, Dixon offers heating oil, propane, air-conditioning and complete service and installations.