http://www.globalhemp.com/News/2001/August/refill_madness.shtml

Week of August 8 - 14, 2001

Hemp-Powered Car Rolls Its Own Fuel
Refill Madness

Erik Baard, The Village Voice

Hemp Across America: The Hemp Car crew (All photos from hempcar.org)
While high-powered lobbyists clashed, seduced, and debated their way 
to a House energy bill last Wednesday that called for drilling Arctic 
preserves and left renewable fuel by the wayside, the dialogue at the 
helm of one alternative-fuel program went something like this:

"Where are we parking? I don't see any place to park."

"I dunno. Where are you looking?"

"Are we parking here?"

Such was the chatter inside the confusedly circling Hemp Car, a 1983 
Mercedes station wagon powered by oil squeezed from cannabis seeds 
and converted into biodiesel, a cleaner vegetable substitute for the 
petroleum product. Its passengers were activists from Virginia on a 
U.S. tour, who eventually pulled up and parked on a sidewalk for a 
pit stop in Minneapolis. The situation in Bush's Washington is much 
the same: If you're looking for far-out energy resources that blow 
smoke in the face of Big Oil, you have to roll your own 
opportunities. Though the Hemp Car is trundling across the wilds of 
America, D.C. is never far out of mind-that's where the tour began on 
July 4 and will conclude at the start of October.

"We're promoting biomass for fuel instead of drilling in the Arctic 
or taking a new look at nuclear power," explains Hemp Car 
spokesperson Scott Fur. The adventure began with Grayson and Kellie 
Sigler, the eco-activist couple at the heart of the Hemp Car effort, 
who were itching to take a cross-country trip without choking the 
scenery. Research led them to industrial hemp. That's right, the 
industrial stuff-you won't get a buzz from tailgating the Hemp Car. 
Not that the crew would mind.

"We see nothing wrong with responsible people using marijuana. We're 
frankly sick of nonviolent drug offenders being thrown in jail," Fur 
fumes.

But mixing those issues may prove a bit too combustible for biofuel 
allies on Capitol Hill. Just ask South Dakota senator Tim Johnson, 
who introduced a bill to his chamber's energy committee in July 
requiring that renewables like biodiesel and ethanol, an alcohol 
additive made from cellulose, compose 2 percent of transportation 
fuel by 2008 and 5 percent by 2016. Johnson is girding for a fight 
with hardline conservatives in the pocket of Big Oil. "I would 
guess," notes spokesperson Bob Martin dryly, "that industrial hemp 
would be a little harder to sell than biodiesel based on soybeans."

If hemp is too taboo for Washington, there have been enough other 
demonstration vehicles to stage a Cannonball Run. Best known among 
them are the Veggie Van, the Grease Car, and Greasy Gretta the 
Volkswagen Jetta. They can all trace their ancestry to the diesel 
engine showcased at the 1900 World's Fair, which ran on straight 
peanut oil. Today's Grease Car also runs on pure vegetable oil and 
used grease, but needs to be warmed first by burning 
diesel-coventional or bio. And it broke down on the return leg of its 
tour. Justin Carven, the 24-year-old who invented it as a college 
project, now sells conversion kits for $795.

Oddly enough, for the pilots of the Hemp Car, one of the bedrock 
rules is abstinence. "In the car we're trying to keep everything by 
the book, everything above board, so nothing bad happens," Fur says. 
He figures a station wagon emblazoned "This Car Powered by Hemp" and 
"Make It Hempen" is already a traveling KICK ME sign. Even industrial 
hemp, with THC levels so low you'd have to smoke a doobie the size of 
a telephone pole to get high, is illegal to grow (but not use in 
finished form) in America. It doesn't help that most Canadian farmers 
who started growing hemp plants-whose fiber can also produce paper 
and cloth and strengthen plastics-in a federal experiment in 1998 
have already abandoned it. Officials there say processing it was 
uneconomical and teenagers raided fields to sell the drug-free 
clippings, misrepresented as kind bud to naive classmates. The Hemp 
Car gets most of its stash from China; it's processed by Apple Energy 
in Virginia and shipped to points along the route.

So far, so good with American authorities, Fur reports. "Actually, 
our only experience was positive," he says. "When we pulled into 
Detroit from Canada, the border cops said, 'You know, there's no way 
we can let you in with a car like that without being searched.' And 
so they took us into this room and through the window we could see 
the dog just laying there with his head on his paws and all the 
border cops stood around the car and got their pictures taken with 
it. Their only questions were like, 'How is the tour going?' and 'How 
many miles per gallon do you get?'

"They know the difference between marijuana and hemp," adds Fur, 
whose uncle is a New York City cop. But that doesn't spare the crew 
some ribbing. "One of the most frequent questions I get is, if we 
leave a trail of nachos behind us."

Free from the typical belching of a car on fossil fuels, biodiesel 
engines put out a fragrance likened to French fries or doughnuts. 
More importantly, the Hemp Car and its kin deliver an immediate 80 
percent cut in emissions of the "greenhouse gas" carbon dioxide, 
advocates of farmed fuel say, a small amount the next crop of 
plants-for-fuel readily absorbs to grow. In theory, it's a closed 
loop of renewable energy low on smog-causing pollutants and free of 
sulfur and hydrocarbons. Biodiesel doesn't yet cut back on nitric 
oxides, or NOx, but the emerging generation of technology promises to 
mop that up.

A huge part of biodiesel's appeal is that it can be made from any 
plant or animal fat, even Soylent Green. Procter & Gamble's baby-food 
division is a big supplier. Refiners use an alcohol to break fatty 
acids away from glycerin, resulting in a fuel that's slightly goopy, 
with the same viscosity and power density as petrodiesel but with 
greater lubricity. Biodiesel is also more biodegradable, and safer to 
handle and transport. And because diesel engines are inherently more 
efficient than gasoline engines, even an old warhorse like the 
5000-pound Hemp Car gets 27 miles per gallon.

But when it comes to passenger cars, Americans are still wed to the 
gasoline-fired, internal combustion engine. Diesels do the heavy 
lifting, with trucks, buses, earthmovers, tractors, generators, and 
mining equipment usually powered by the cheaper fuel. That's why, 
when Washington seeks biofuels, the pols think first of ethanol.

One Hail Mary pass at alternative energy would be biogasoline-as 
opposed to biodiesel-which could run most current cars. The late 
Nobel laureate chemist Melvin Calvin started the quest at the 
University of California. Now Purdue University researcher Bernard 
Tao has taken up the search, with hopes of genetically engineering a 
plant that could produce clean, efficient gas.

Still, Volkswagen is keeping a toe in the diesel market on a gamble 
that America might swing Germany's way, where about half the cars 
carry that kind of engine. If biodiesel hits the mainstream, it'll 
most likely be in the tanks of Volkswagens. No other major company is 
selling diesel passenger cars here. "We're fighting an uphill battle 
in the United States because diesel has a bad rap," complains company 
spokesperson Tony Fouladpour. Despite the Volkswagen's quiet, 
clean-burning engine, American consumers still imagine stinking, 
knocking old clunkers.

Though diesel sales are up sharply in the U.S., they account for just 
10 percent of Volkswagen's market. The industry and its regulators 
set 2007 as the year diesels will run cleaner than today's 
natural-gas engines. By then, the fuel of choice may not be pumped 
from the earth, but grown. "The cars will perform perfectly fine on 
biodiesel," Fouladpour says. "And we would welcome that."

Another lead Germany has over America is in biodiesel distribution. 
There are 900 public filling stations vending biodiesel in Germany, 
which has an area smaller than California. The continental U.S. just 
started installing public biodiesel pumps in May. Olympian, the 
proprietor of a pump in San Francisco, is thrilled. "I am tickled to 
death with the results of this one," says company executive Tom 
Burke. "We had another alternative fuel before, E85 gasoline [85 
percent ethanol] in a four-thousand-gallon tank that sat for five 
years. We decided to put biodiesel in that tank, and since May we've 
sold over 5000 gallons. We think the success has been phenomenal."

There are plans for biodiesel pumps in a dozen states before 2002.

For a traditional petroleum company like Olympian, the novel venture 
is an "easy in, easy out," Burke observes, because the pumps work the 
same as ones for standard diesel. The per-gallon price remains 50 
cents higher, he adds, but once the gap closes, biodiesel "will be a 
very common fuel."

Homemade brews already seem hokey now that the government has 
biodiesel vehicles plying the highways of California, Minnesota, and 
Florida, as part of complying with a 1992 law mandating greener 
fleets. The Pentagon and National Parks Service have also taken 
biodiesel to heart. As demand grows, new sources beyond cooking 
grease will have to be found, but the answer isn't likely to be hemp.

"Hippy-dippy" projects don't use the full power value of fats and 
don't reward the processor enough to be financial viable, says Dr. K. 
Shaine Tyson, renewable-diesel project manager at the Department of 
Energy's National Renewable Energy Lab in Golden, Colorado. Her own 
idea is nearly as exotic though: the lowly mustard seed. Tyson says 
its oil would make inexpensive biodiesel, and the remains could pull 
a profit as organic pesticide instead of being pushed off as animal 
feed, as happens with soybeans once they've been mashed.

But don't look for miracles, she cautions. "We're never going to 
replace all diesel in America. We'd be lucky if we made a 10 percent 
dent," she predicts. As for passenger cars, biofuels won't even make 
the radar unless Americans radically change their auto buying habits.

Olympian's supplier, World Energy, is working overtime to promote 
biodiesel, but company president Gene Gebolys agrees with Tyson. He 
described biodiesel as "an existing intermediate-wedge technology 
unparalleled in its ability to have quick impact." But as he drove 
through California's behemoth Tehachapi Pass wind farm, he commented, 
"We don't expect it to be the end-all, be-all. Years ago everybody 
wanted to find the quick fix, a pill we could take to make 
fossil-fuel ills go away. Well, it's going to take a buffet of 
technologies."

That explains some of the resistance World Energy, based in 
Massachusetts, has gotten from Northeastern states, including New 
York. Environmentalists here have committed themselves to compressed 
natural gas and view biodiesel as a threat, he says. Even California, 
while pioneering public access to biodiesel limits the sale of diesel 
cars, a remnant of how diesel was perceived in decades past.

In the end, that battle might be moot, with arguing over combustible 
fuels at the start of this century like arguing over superior horse 
feeds at the start of the last. Even Olympian's Burke argues that 
hydrogen fuel cells may be poised to supplant the lot of them in a 
generation or two. Some biodiesel enthusiasts cite Dr. Rudolf 
Diesel's prediction that vegetable oils may seem insignificant today, 
but over time may become "as important as petroleum and the coal tar 
products." Others recall his French contemporary, Jules Verne, who 
prophesized that "water is the coal of the future. The energy of 
tomorrow is water broken down into hydrogen and oxygen, using 
electricity. These elements will secure the earth's power supply for 
an indefinite period." Then again, experts suggest that biodiesel 
could reposition itself as a source of hydrogen.

Regardless of the outcome, the trippy Hemp Car will be a burnout. "We 
all have gasoline automobiles. After this, it's back to gasoline, 
unfortunately," admits Fur. But will the crew still find use for 
cannabis? "Well," he says, revealing everything and nothing, "y'know. 
. . . "

Research assistance: Taron Flood

Copyright © 2001, The Village Voice. All rights reserved.



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