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Ethanol Worldwide
Ethanol Worldwide
Other countries are either producing and using ethanol in
large quantities or are providing incentives to expand ethanol
production and use. Brazil and Sweden are using large quantities
of ethanol as a fuel. Some Canadian provinces promote ethanol
use as a fuel by offering subsidies of up to 45 cents per
gallon of ethanol.
India is initiating the use of ethanol as an automotive
fuel. A move has been made by distilleries in India to use
surplus alcohol as a blending agent or an oxygenate in gasoline.
Based on experiments by the Indian Institute of Petroleum,
a 10 percent ethanol blend with gasoline and a 15 percent
ethanol blend with diesel are being considered for use in
vehicles in at least one state.
In France, ethanol is produced from grapes that are of
insufficient quality for wine production. Prompted by the
increase in oil prices in the 1970s, Brazil introduced a
program to produce ethanol for use in automobiles in order
to reduce oil imports. Brazilian ethanol is made mainly
from sugar cane. Pure ethanol (100% ethanol) is used in
approximately 40 percent of the cars in Brazil. The remaining
vehicles use blends of 24 percent ethanol with 76 percent
gasoline. Brazil consumes nearly 4 billion gallons of ethanol
annually. In addition to consumption, Brazil also exports
ethanol to other countries.
Sweden has used ethanol in chemical production for many
years. As a result, Swedens crude oil consumption
has been cut in half since 1980. During the same time period,
the use of gasoline and diesel for transportation has also
increased. Emissions have been reduced by placing catalytic
converters in vehicle exhaust systems which decrease carbon
monoxide, hydrocarbon, and nitrogen oxide emissions. To
address global warming concerns, the amount of carbon dioxide
produced while burning fossil fuels must be reduced. Ethanol-blended
gasoline and ethanol-blended diesel are being considered
as viable alternatives to further lower emission levels.