tigerbalm
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Damien
- Joined
- Oct 11, 2020
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- Location
- Dublin, Ireland
- Vehicles
- 911 Targa 4 GTS, Fiat 500 EV. Sold: Taycan Turbo S, Taycan 4S; Panamera Turbo S

That is disappointing to hear – I have been a bit of a "fan" of this eFuel research and approach. I had hoped that the EU decision to exempt cars running on synthetic fuel would give the research a focus and purpose.One of my ex-colleagues who has worked for the last few years for a R&D company making synthetic petrol has just been told he will be made redundant since they can not raise the investment needed to continue.
Whether it is the projected cost which puts investors off or the time scale to viability I don't know.
https://www.euronews.com/my-europe/...s-from-2035-ban-on-new-sales-of-combustion-en
I wonder how much the market is assuming that the 2035 ban isn't realistic and will get pushed back to a much further date? The enthusiasm for these aggressive timelines seems to have waned since the end of the pandemic.
There is no way that the synthetic fuel is as environmentally friendly as a full battery electric vehicle recharged from a renewable energy source.
But I just love the idea that a country such as Ireland(*) – which has an abundance of wind energy – could with this technology be self sufficient in producing synthetic petrol (we currently import 100% of our supply) – while simultaneously taking CO2 out of the environment very appealing.
Post 2035 there are at least 1.4 billion combustion engines in worldwide usage and this technology – while imperfect – offers a potential solution to massively reducing their environmental impact.
* The Atlantic off the west coast of Ireland has some of the largest wind generation potential in the world. Already, during very windy days, Ireland has generated 100% of its energy requirement from wind. Though of course it is still unreliable until more offshore wind farms have been developed.
Live view of generation sources for the island of Ireland (both Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland) as – despite Brexit – acts as a single electricity market:
https://www.smartgriddashboard.com/all/
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