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['Vehicle Technology', 'Business planning - Motor Carrier']
['Vehicle Technology', 'Equipment specing and purchasing - Motor Carrier']
05/17/2024
ez Explanations
Ethanol is a renewable fuel made from corn and other biomass (plant) materials, then blended with gasoline. More than 90 percent of gas in the U.S. contains some ethanol.
Scope
Ethanol may be suitable for some fleets to help reduce emissions and lower fuel costs depending on which state the carrier operates in.
Regulatory citations
- None
Key definitions
- E10: The most common ethanol blend that is 10 percent ethanol and 90 percent gasoline. E10 is sold in every state.
- E15: 15 percent ethanol and 85 percent gasoline. E15 can be used in light-duty gasoline vehicles produced in 2001 and later. However, E15 can cause damage to off-road vehicles and model year 2000 and earlier vehicles. E15 fuel pumps must be labeled to avoid misfueling.
Summary of requirements
Emissions requirements often depend on the state in which the carrier operates.
Ethanol is added to conventional gasoline to boost octane (resistance of motor fuel to knock) and reduce tailpipe emissions. Ethanol blends are not zero-emissions fuels and may increase net emissions when considering the entire production process through tailpipe emissions.
However, carbon dioxide (CO2) tailpipe emissions can be reduced by up to 40 percent compared to gasoline and diesel due to CO2 from the crops grown to produce ethanol, depending on the blend.
Both E10 and E15 do not qualify as an alternative fuel, as compared to petroleum-based fuels under the Energy Policy Act of 1992, but are approved by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for use in any highway vehicle gasoline engine manufactured in 2001 and later.
E85 can be used in "flex-fuel" vehicles (FFVs) that run on a blend of 51-83 percent ethanol mixed with gasoline. E85 is considered an alternative fuel. Some E85 aspects to examine include:
Performance: There is no performance loss when using E85, and some FFVs have more torque and horsepower with E85 than on regular gasoline.
Availability: E85 is widely available as it is sold at 4,307 filling stations in the U.S., according to the Department of Energy's (DOE) Alternative Fuels Data Center (AFDC).
Fuel efficiency: Due to ethanol's lower energy content, FFVs operating on E85 achieve 15 to 27 percent fewer miles per gallon than regular gasoline, depending on the ethanol content. E85 is typically cheaper per gallon than gasoline (see the table below) but slightly more expensive per mile. The AFDC showed the October 1 - 15, 2023, national average price per gallon as follows:
| Fuel | Cost per gallon |
| Ethanol (E85) | $3.05 |
| Diesel | $4.52 |
| Gasoline | $3.72 |
['Vehicle Technology', 'Business planning - Motor Carrier']
['Vehicle Technology', 'Equipment specing and purchasing - Motor Carrier']
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