We are looking very hard at getting an E-85 vehicle. My wife passes the only pump in town with it on her way to work. We like the politics, even at a higher price.
FULL story:
http://releases.usnewswire.com/GetRelease.asp?id=71591Consumer Reports Tests Show That E85 Ethanol Offers Cleaner Emissions -- But Poorer Fuel Economy; Photo Available
8/31/2006 6:03:00 PM
To: National Desk
Contact: Douglas Love, 914-378-2437 or dlove@consumer.org; C. Matt Fields, 914-378-2454 or cfields@consumer.org, both of Consumer Reports
YONKERS, N.Y., Aug. 31 /U.S. Newswire/ -- Tests and an investigation by Consumer Reports conclude that E85 ethanol will cost consumers more money than gasoline and that there are concerns about whether the government's support of flexible fuel vehicles is really helping the U.S. achieve energy independence.
Findings from CR's special report include:
-- E85, which is 85 percent ethanol, emits less smog-producing pollutants than gasoline, but provides fewer miles per gallon, costs more, and is hard to find outside the Midwest.
-- Government support for flexible-fuel vehicles, which can run on either E85 or gasoline, is indirectly causing more gasoline consumption rather than less.
-- Blended with gasoline, ethanol has the potential to fill a significant minority of future U.S. transportation fuel needs.
To see how E85 ethanol stacks up against gasoline, Consumer Reports put one of its test vehicles, a 2007 Chevrolet Tahoe Flexible-Fuel Vehicle (FFV) through an array of fuel economy, acceleration, and emissions tests.
Overall fuel economy on the Tahoe dropped from an already low 14 mpg overall to 10. In highway driving, gas mileage decreased from 21 to 15 mpg; in city driving, it dropped from 9 mpg to 7. You could expect a similar decrease in gas mileage in any current flex fuel vehicle because ethanol has a lower energy content than gasoline-75,670 British thermal units (BTUs) per gallon instead of 115,400 for gasoline, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. As a result, you have to burn more fuel to generate the same amount of energy.