abdooooo!!!
Banned
i can't believe that i woke up at 6am to write this, me crazy... sleepy
anyway, is this answer good? can you help me improve this answer?
the dot point is: process information from secondary sources to summarise the use of ethanol as an alternative car fuel, evaluating the success of current usage (the answer is for the evaluation)
The success of current usage of ethanol will be judged based on the criteria: economic cost, environmental impact, performance impact, and government backing
Evaluation,
Ethanol is used as fuel in many countries. It is particularly popular in Brazil, where 4 million vehicles are powered by pure ethanol derived from sugar cane. Because Brazil has very high pollution level and very few oil reserves, ethanol helps to lower emission of harmful pollutants and decrease their dependency on the limited fossil feul. Brazil and some US states mandate ethanol content in petrol.
Small amounts of ethanol have been added to Australian petrol for around 20 years. At present, ethanol production levels are low, with only 60 million litres produced for fuel each year. Of these 60 million litres of ethanol, 90% is sold to NSW, and most of this ends up in Sydney.
A survey released by Caltex in October 2002 showed most of the petrol sold contain more than 10% ethanol. This pressured the Howard government to cap ethanol to a maximum of 10%, because there were uncertainties over the benefit/dangers of high ethanol content, and the impact on a normal car engines performance.
Using ethanol as a petrol supplement has implications for consumers, and also for the environment and economy, due to the problems of storing and supplying fuel containing ethanol. Storage tanks and fittings at service stations have not been designed for fuels containing large amounts of ethanol, and would need costly upgrades in order to safely and effectively house such fuels.
Ethanol has a lower energy content than petrol, therefore the higher the ethanol content, the higher the rate of fuel consumption. Ethanol is currently more expensive to produce than petrol; hence the government have to fund the extra cost, this incurs an economic cost.
The current usage of ethanol hasnt been all that successful in Australia based on these criteria. At the moment, in most of the countries in the world, the downside in using ethanol far outweighs the benefits. However, countries like Brazil have shown that ethanol as a stand alone fuel can work one day in Australia, and the rest of the world.
and can someone tell me what the first part of the dot point mean? when it says "alternative car fuel", it means 100% ethanol right? do i just talk about what brazil is doing or maybe different car designs?
thanks
anyway, is this answer good? can you help me improve this answer?
the dot point is: process information from secondary sources to summarise the use of ethanol as an alternative car fuel, evaluating the success of current usage (the answer is for the evaluation)
The success of current usage of ethanol will be judged based on the criteria: economic cost, environmental impact, performance impact, and government backing
Evaluation,
Ethanol is used as fuel in many countries. It is particularly popular in Brazil, where 4 million vehicles are powered by pure ethanol derived from sugar cane. Because Brazil has very high pollution level and very few oil reserves, ethanol helps to lower emission of harmful pollutants and decrease their dependency on the limited fossil feul. Brazil and some US states mandate ethanol content in petrol.
Small amounts of ethanol have been added to Australian petrol for around 20 years. At present, ethanol production levels are low, with only 60 million litres produced for fuel each year. Of these 60 million litres of ethanol, 90% is sold to NSW, and most of this ends up in Sydney.
A survey released by Caltex in October 2002 showed most of the petrol sold contain more than 10% ethanol. This pressured the Howard government to cap ethanol to a maximum of 10%, because there were uncertainties over the benefit/dangers of high ethanol content, and the impact on a normal car engines performance.
Using ethanol as a petrol supplement has implications for consumers, and also for the environment and economy, due to the problems of storing and supplying fuel containing ethanol. Storage tanks and fittings at service stations have not been designed for fuels containing large amounts of ethanol, and would need costly upgrades in order to safely and effectively house such fuels.
Ethanol has a lower energy content than petrol, therefore the higher the ethanol content, the higher the rate of fuel consumption. Ethanol is currently more expensive to produce than petrol; hence the government have to fund the extra cost, this incurs an economic cost.
The current usage of ethanol hasnt been all that successful in Australia based on these criteria. At the moment, in most of the countries in the world, the downside in using ethanol far outweighs the benefits. However, countries like Brazil have shown that ethanol as a stand alone fuel can work one day in Australia, and the rest of the world.
and can someone tell me what the first part of the dot point mean? when it says "alternative car fuel", it means 100% ethanol right? do i just talk about what brazil is doing or maybe different car designs?
thanks
Last edited: