Arts & Literature1 min ago
Colourful Suggestion
10 Answers
Can I suggest a green section (other than A&N/Environment), as it is a topical issue?
After watching Dick Strawbridge last night I decided I wanted to run my wife's Rangey on biodiesel. Having looked into it at http://www.biodieselfillingstations.co.uk/ , I found that the nearest filling point charges 85.9p per litre. Now my local garage sells ordinary eco-destroying ozone polluting diesel at 93.9p per litre. I would have to drive 14 miles to save about �4. Where is the incentive in that, apart from a minute planet-saving contribution?
Should I have put this in motoring?
After watching Dick Strawbridge last night I decided I wanted to run my wife's Rangey on biodiesel. Having looked into it at http://www.biodieselfillingstations.co.uk/ , I found that the nearest filling point charges 85.9p per litre. Now my local garage sells ordinary eco-destroying ozone polluting diesel at 93.9p per litre. I would have to drive 14 miles to save about �4. Where is the incentive in that, apart from a minute planet-saving contribution?
Should I have put this in motoring?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Do you make a special trip every time you want to fill the car up? I just stop at a petrol station when mine is getting low. Why not combine the trip to the filling point with a visit to an eco-friendly farmers' market, and stop at a wind farm along the way to admire the technology?
Or why not just sell the Rangey and encourage your wife to walk?
Or why not just sell the Rangey and encourage your wife to walk?
I don't know if major outlays are the best idea... I'm thinking of ordinary diesel, which used to be loads cheaper than petrol because they were trying to promote its use; now the taxes have gone up so it's basically the same price as petrol. I'm all for filling up with corn syrup or whatever, combining it with other trips so as not to be too wasteful; but I'd be wary of building a home filling station on the strength of government waffle about encouraging its use. Brown or Cameron or whever could change their minds tomorrow.
The fact that it harnesses the reuse of expended cooking oil to power a diesel vehicle and is zero emitting is enough for me to consider using it. As I understand it, around 83% of the fuel pump price is tax, so one way or another we end up paying through the nose. This tax is applied to biodiesel as well as far as I know, hence I know it is only a small gesture, but where is the incentive to go �green�? Or is it just the threat of making fuels, whether fossil or renewable, just too expensive to force people into not using fuel consuming equipment?
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