Paradigm shift in Mobility
The following article was emailed to me by a friend in USA. It makes interesting reading. I wonder where in Australia they are trialling this? December 10, 2008 Op-Ed Columnist While Detroit Slept By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN As I think about our bailing out Detroit, I can’t help but…
It makes interesting reading. I wonder where in Australia they are trialling this?
Why do I bring this up? Because someone in the mobility business in Denmark and Tel Aviv is already developing a real-world alternative to Detroit’s business model. I don’t know if this alternative to gasoline-powered cars will work, but I do know that it can be done - and Detroit isn’t doing it. And therefore it will be done, and eventually, I bet, it will be done profitably. And when it is, our bailout of Detroit will be remembered as the equivalent of pouring billions of dollars of taxpayer money into the mail-order-catalogue business on the eve of the birth of eBay. It will be remembered as pouring billions of dollars into the CD music business on the eve of the birth of the iPod and iTunes. It will be remembered as pouring billions of dollars into a book-store chain on the eve of the birth of Amazon.com and the Kindle. It will be remembered as pouring billions of dollars into improving typewriters on the eve of the birth of the PC and the Internet. What business model am I talking about? It is Shai Agassi’s electric car network company, called Better Place. Just last week, the company, based in Palo Alto, Calif., announced a partnership with the state of Hawaii to road test its business plan there after already inking similar deals with Israel, Australia, the San Francisco Bay area and, yes, Denmark. The Better Place electric car charging system involves generating electrons from as much renewable energy - such as wind and solar - as possible and then feeding those clean electrons into a national electric car charging infrastructure. This consists of electricity charging spots with plug-in outlets - the first pilots were opened in Israel this week - plus battery-exchange stations all over the respective country. The whole system is then coordinated by a service control center that integrates and does the billing. Under the Better Place model, consumers can either buy or lease an electric car from the French automaker Renault or Japanese companies like Nissan (General Motors snubbed Agassi) and then buy miles on their electric car batteries from Better Place the way you now buy an Apple cellphone and the minutes from AT&T. That way Better Place, or any car company that partners with it, benefits from each mile you drive. G.M. sells cars. Better Place is selling mobility miles. The first Renault and Nissan electric cars are scheduled to hit Denmark and Israel in 2011, when the whole system should be up and running. On Tuesday, Japan’s Ministry of Environment invited Better Place to join the first government-led electric car project along with Honda, Mitsubishi and Subaru. Better Place was the only foreign company invited to participate, working with Japan’s leading auto companies, to build a battery swap station for electric cars in Yokohama, the Detroit of Japan. What I find exciting about Better Place is that it is building a car company off the new industrial platform of the 21st century, not the one from the 20th - the exact same way that Steve Jobs did to overturn the music business. What did Apple understand first? One, that today’s technology platform would allow anyone with a computer to record music. Two, that the Internet and MP3 players would allow anyone to transfer music in digital form to anyone else. You wouldn’t need CDs or record companies anymore. Apple simply took all those innovations and integrated them into a single music-generating, purchasing and listening system that completely disrupted the music business. What Agassi, the founder of Better Place, is saying is that there is a new way to generate mobility, not just music, using the same platform. It just takes the right kind of auto battery - the iPod in this story - and the right kind of national plug-in network - the iTunes store - to make the business model work for electric cars at six cents a mile. The average American is paying today around 12 cents a mile for gasoline transportation, which also adds to global warming and strengthens petro-dictators. Do not expect this innovation to come out of Detroit. Remember, in 1908, the Ford Model-T got better mileage - 25 miles per gallon - than many Ford, G.M. and Chrysler models made in 2008. But don’t be surprised when it comes out of somewhere else. It can be done. It will be done. If we miss the chance to win the race for Car 2.0 because we keep mindlessly bailing out Car 1.0, there will be no one to blame more than Detroit’s new shareholders: we the taxpayers. New York Times Company
Op-Ed Columnist
While Detroit Slept
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
As I think about our bailing out Detroit, I can’t help but reflect on what, in my view, is the most important rule of business in today’s integrated and digitized global market, where knowledge and innovation tools are so widely distributed. It’s this: Whatever can be done, will be done. The only question is will it be done by you or to you. Just don’t think it won’t be done. If you have an idea in Detroit or Tennessee, promise me that you’ll pursue it, because someone in Denmark or Tel Aviv will do so a second later.
Kenworth and Westport to bring LNG trucks to Australia
(automatically updated/inserted from The Envirofuels Blog) Westport Innovations and PACCAR Australia, the manufacturers of Kenworth trucks, have announced that the companies will develop and commercialise liquefied natural gas (LNG) Kenworth trucks for the Australian market. Kenworth plan to…
Westport Innovations and PACCAR Australia, the manufacturers of Kenworth trucks, have announced that the companies will develop and commercialise liquefied natural gas (LNG) Kenworth trucks for the Australian market. Kenworth plan to begin factory-installed production in mid-2009 beginning with the T908, K108 and T408SAR truck chassis and roll out across additional models into the future. [...]
Please click this link to read the full article on the Envirofuels website.
Hilux runs on veg but not on diesel.
My son bought a 1990 Hilux Surf with 2.4 turbo diesel engine. We found that the cylinder head, turbo and IP all needed replacing so we fitted a second hand 2.8 (non-turbo) engine instead. Once we had that sorted I did the conversion for him, including a Walbro pusher pump. We found that the pusher…
This afternoon we managed to get it started on diesel by pumping the priming plunger on the diesel filter. We had to keep pumping to keep it running, stop pumping and the engine stopped. Afterwards there was a large puddle of diesel under the car. After about 5 mins we switched to veg and I pumped that primer for a while then stopped pumping for a while and let it idle. All was well except for a slight drip. Then he drove it 100 km with me following - no trouble, ran perfectly. IP comes off tomorrow and goes to a pump specialist.
I am thinking that the leak (front seal??) is so bad on the low viscosity diesel the the integral lift pump can’t keep up supply pressure to the IP. It is losing too much to the leak but constantly pumping the priming plunger was compensating. Switching to veg (higher viscosity) resulted in a lesser loss and more fuel getting to the pumping plunger and thus injectors.
So here is an example of an IP kept alive by veg.
8,000 km on veg has saved him nearly $2,000 and deferred the cost of IP overhaul for several months.
OR
Another example of damage caused by veg.
Life on Myanmar’s biofuels plantation
(automatically updated/inserted from The Big Biofuels Blog) Tidied up Life on a Myanmar biofuels plantation is explore (http://blogs.straitstimes.com/2008/12/10/life-on-myanmar-s-biofuels-plantations)d and found to be pretty rosy in this article from Singapore’s Straights Times. Well it…
Tidied up
Life on a Myanmar biofuels plantation is explored and found to be pretty rosy in this article from Singapore’s Straights Times. Well it would be, its the Straights Times and its a Singaporean investment. Didn’t look around at any others though… Didn’t explain whether the companies gained the land on the basis of prior informed consent of the locals…
Separately, while we’re on the subject of Myanmar here are some links to the MOU between Myanmar Agri-Tec and South Korea’s Enertech to make biofuel from the Jatropha grown. There’s also a scheme to use the plantation to generate carbon credits… which is forward looking.
Tasmanian consortium to provide LNG for heavy transport
(automatically updated/inserted from The Envirofuels Blog) LNG Refuellers Pty Ltd, a consortium comprising seven Tasmanian transport operators, has announced a deal with industrial gas company BOC, for the supply of Liquid Natural Gas (LNG) fuel for over 120 natural gas powered heavy vehicles….
LNG Refuellers Pty Ltd, a consortium comprising seven Tasmanian transport operators, has announced a deal with industrial gas company BOC, for the supply of Liquid Natural Gas (LNG) fuel for over 120 natural gas powered heavy vehicles. LNG Refuellers will own and operate a network of six commercial LNG refuelling stations across Tasmania.BOC will design [...]
Please click this link to read the full article on the Envirofuels website.






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