Toto Wolf - Formula 1 should be leading the pack in sustainable fuels and biofuels instead of electric

All that has to do with the power train, gearbox, clutch, fuels and lubricants, etc. Generally the mechanical side of Formula One.

What could this mean for the upcoming 2025 engines?

It will be more focused on the ICE side with sustainable/bio-fuels
26
51%
It will be still more focused on the electrical side
13
25%
Both will get equal focus
12
24%
 
Total votes: 51

DChemTech
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Re: Toto Wolf - Formula 1 should be leading the pack in sustainable fuels and biofuels instead of electric

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RedNEO wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 17:53
Just_a_fan wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 17:01
You seem more concerned about these pollutants that you’ve imagined exist in your head but you’ve yet to say what they are. We know biofuels are already carbon neutral and F1 is working to make them zero by 2030. Yes that means more carbon will be being taken out of the atmosphere then put back in. Carbon neutral means nothing extra is being put back into the atmosphere. Batteries is only adding to the total amount of carbon dioxide with its dirty production. Eventually you will stop working overtime to try and play down biofuels and recognise it’s the better solution to batteries and it’s what F1 and the car industry has recognised is the way forwards. Arguing about minor details isn’t going to change anything.
Do you even read the responses that you are getting?
You cannot just dismiss emissions of particulate matter, nitrogen components &c from biofuels as 'non existing'. Those emissions do exist.
Despite being called out -several times-, you keep acting as if no sustainable energy can be used in battery production, yet biofuel production somehow exclusively makes use of clean energy. That's fallacious and dishonest. You also keep acting as if there are no secondary emissions/pollutants from biofuel production, while battery production is riddled with it. Stop comparing apples and oranges.
No, carbon neutral fuels do not mean "Yes that means more carbon will be being taken out of the atmosphere then put back in". It means as much. But that does not make efficiency irrelevant. If you need 5 kWh of energy to make 1 kWh worth of synfuel with air-carbon, you are wasting energy. You would have been better of using that 5 kWh to power a car directly. Or, you could have used it to displace 5 kWh of fossil energy from the grid, which would have a bigger impact on net. CO2 emissions. Efficiency matters. Always.
You haven't addressed the issue of biomass availability, at all.
You may dislike batteries all you like, but either disregarding or strawmanning responses you get is not going to make your case very strong. I do see where the minus-score comes from with such a course of 'discussion', though.

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RedNEO
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Re: Toto Wolf - Formula 1 should be leading the pack in sustainable fuels and biofuels instead of electric

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DChemTech wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 18:55
Do you even read the responses that you are getting?
You cannot just dismiss emissions of particulate matter, nitrogen components &c from biofuels as 'non existing'. Those emissions do exist.
Despite being called out -several times-, you keep acting as if no sustainable energy can be used in battery production, yet biofuel production somehow exclusively makes use of clean energy. That's fallacious and dishonest. You also keep acting as if there are no secondary emissions/pollutants from biofuel production, while battery production is riddled with it. Stop comparing apples and oranges.
No, carbon neutral fuels do not mean "Yes that means more carbon will be being taken out of the atmosphere then put back in". It means as much. But that does not make efficiency irrelevant. If you need 5 kWh of energy to make 1 kWh worth of synfuel with air-carbon, you are wasting energy. You would have been better of using that 5 kWh to power a car directly. Or, you could have used it to displace 5 kWh of fossil energy from the grid, which would have a bigger impact on net. CO2 emissions. Efficiency matters. Always.
You haven't addressed the issue of biomass availability, at all.
You may dislike batteries all you like, but either disregarding or strawmanning responses you get is not going to make your case very strong. I do see where the minus-score comes from with such a course of 'discussion', though.
I did read it. Did you read mine? Perhaps you wouldn’t have corrected me if you did because I said net zero is when more carbon will be being extracted than put back in. Anyway I’ve already pointed why biofuels are better at doing what batteries were trying to do but now it’s become about ‘whataboutisms’. It’s not about not liking batteries it’s just I share the opinion of Toto that biofuels solve a problem better than they could. If you think they are not as efficient thats fine, but they have far more benefits than losses and remember it’s only the second generation of biofuels and they have already achieved carbon neutrality.

Just_a_fan
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Re: Toto Wolf - Formula 1 should be leading the pack in sustainable fuels and biofuels instead of electric

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RedNEO wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 17:53
Just_a_fan wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 17:01
RedNEO wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 11:37


I don’t share your efficiency concerns, it’s irrelevant. You should be more concerned about the fact 17.5 tons of carbon dioxide is emitted by the making of the average electric car battery. That measurement is even larger with the production of some of the larger batteries.

These biofuels and synthetic fuels don’t add to the Co2 in the atmosphere at the very least they subtract by using them to make carbon neutral fuels among other things all while being 100% renewable.
Efficiency is important, whether you care about it or not. Wasting resources because you think they're free is still a waste. As every system has losses, efficiency is still a requirement.

And using CO2 from the atmosphere to use in a fuel doesn't remove it at all. It gets put right back in the atmosphere when you burn the fuel. You also create other pollutants when you burn the fuel - biofuels still create NOx and other stuff that needs to be dealt with. The chemistry of combustion doesn't care where the hydrocarbon came from so it doesn't suddenly stop producing pollutants just because the barrel has "biofuel" on the label.
You seem more concerned about these pollutants that you’ve imagined exist in your head but you’ve yet to say what they are. We know biofuels are already carbon neutral and F1 is working to make them zero by 2030. Yes that means more carbon will be being taken out of the atmosphere then put back in. Carbon neutral means nothing extra is being put back into the atmosphere. Batteries is only adding to the total amount of carbon dioxide with its dirty production. Eventually you will stop working overtime to try and play down biofuels and recognise it’s the better solution to batteries and it’s what F1 and the car industry has recognised is the way forwards. Arguing about minor details isn’t going to change anything.
So you've never heard of NOx? Or particulates? OK.

Please show how taking carbon out of the atmosphere, putting it in a fuel and then burning that fuel results in less carbon in the atmosphere at the end of the process.
If you are more fortunate than others, build a larger table not a taller fence.

Just_a_fan
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Re: Toto Wolf - Formula 1 should be leading the pack in sustainable fuels and biofuels instead of electric

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RedNEO wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 18:52
nzjrs wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 18:15
RedNEO wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 17:53
You seem more concerned about these pollutants that you’ve imagined exist in your head but you’ve yet to say what they are. We know biofuels are already carbon neutral and F1 is working to make them zero by 2030. Yes that means more carbon will be being taken out of the atmosphere then put back in. Carbon neutral means nothing extra is being put back into the atmosphere. Batteries is only adding to the total amount of carbon dioxide with its dirty production. Eventually you will stop working overtime to try and play down biofuels and recognise it’s the better solution to batteries and it’s what F1 and the car industry has recognised is the way forwards. Arguing about minor details isn’t going to change anything.
Has it actually been demonstrated/calculated yet that at the scale it is required, sufficient second generation bio-fuels can be produced? It's great that they don't compete with food production 'directly', but arable land area and farmers are finite.
The scalability? Well biofuels is extracting it from waste that has already absorbed co2 and synthetic is just taking it directly from the atmosphere. I imagine both will be used in tandem. I don’t think scalability will be a problem especially since the processes will grow more efficient with more companies including F1 teams and there oil suppliers now fully behind them. It seems like it will be a lot easier and cheaper to extract than with fossil fuels, especially since it’s renewable.
Wow, that's just a paragraph of hand waving what-ifs.
If you are more fortunate than others, build a larger table not a taller fence.

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RedNEO
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Re: Toto Wolf - Formula 1 should be leading the pack in sustainable fuels and biofuels instead of electric

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Just_a_fan wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 19:41
RedNEO wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 17:53
Just_a_fan wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 17:01

Efficiency is important, whether you care about it or not. Wasting resources because you think they're free is still a waste. As every system has losses, efficiency is still a requirement.

And using CO2 from the atmosphere to use in a fuel doesn't remove it at all. It gets put right back in the atmosphere when you burn the fuel. You also create other pollutants when you burn the fuel - biofuels still create NOx and other stuff that needs to be dealt with. The chemistry of combustion doesn't care where the hydrocarbon came from so it doesn't suddenly stop producing pollutants just because the barrel has "biofuel" on the label.
You seem more concerned about these pollutants that you’ve imagined exist in your head but you’ve yet to say what they are. We know biofuels are already carbon neutral and F1 is working to make them zero by 2030. Yes that means more carbon will be being taken out of the atmosphere then put back in. Carbon neutral means nothing extra is being put back into the atmosphere. Batteries is only adding to the total amount of carbon dioxide with its dirty production. Eventually you will stop working overtime to try and play down biofuels and recognise it’s the better solution to batteries and it’s what F1 and the car industry has recognised is the way forwards. Arguing about minor details isn’t going to change anything.
So you've never heard of NOx? Or particulates? OK.

Please show how taking carbon out of the atmosphere, putting it in a fuel and then burning that fuel results in less carbon in the atmosphere at the end of the process.
I’ve heard about them but I don’t see the point you are making? If it’s about which produces more harmful gasses to the atmosphere.. it’s batteries.

The reason it results in less carbon in the atmosphere is because it simply outputs less carbon than it extracts from the atmosphere. Thats what net zero emissions is all about and the reason batteries will not be able to compete, hell they can’t even compete when it’s just carbon neutral. They also have a much shorter shelf life, so it’s just not feasible to produce the amount of batteries you would need and keep adding to the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere when you have no way to extract it.

Just_a_fan
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Re: Toto Wolf - Formula 1 should be leading the pack in sustainable fuels and biofuels instead of electric

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RedNEO wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 19:57
Just_a_fan wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 19:41
RedNEO wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 17:53


You seem more concerned about these pollutants that you’ve imagined exist in your head but you’ve yet to say what they are. We know biofuels are already carbon neutral and F1 is working to make them zero by 2030. Yes that means more carbon will be being taken out of the atmosphere then put back in. Carbon neutral means nothing extra is being put back into the atmosphere. Batteries is only adding to the total amount of carbon dioxide with its dirty production. Eventually you will stop working overtime to try and play down biofuels and recognise it’s the better solution to batteries and it’s what F1 and the car industry has recognised is the way forwards. Arguing about minor details isn’t going to change anything.
So you've never heard of NOx? Or particulates? OK.

Please show how taking carbon out of the atmosphere, putting it in a fuel and then burning that fuel results in less carbon in the atmosphere at the end of the process.
The reason it results in less carbon in the atmosphere is because it simply outputs less carbon than it extracts from the atmosphere.
How does burning a fuel produce less carbon dioxide than went in to making that fuel? "Petrol" is C(n)H(2n+2) - that's going to be the same with these "biofuels" because they're just making "petrol" from the air. You burn it in ideal conditions and you get CO2 and H2O. But you don't get ideal conditions in any engine so you get CO2, CO, H2O, NOx, particulates (these are soot which is, you guessed it, carbon) etc. The amount of C out is the same as the amount of C in. It doesn't matter who funded the research and who backs it, the chemistry is set by the Universe and it doesn't care.

In principle one could make the biofuel so pure that it contained no other atoms other than C and H and that would help with other pollutants such as sulphur, but as most petrol these days is extremely low in sulphur anyway, that's a minor gain.

And in order to make all of this biofuel, you need energy. Now that can be from the Sun via photosynthesis (growing the fuel) or via PV, or via wind turbines, or hydro, but it all needs energy. And you get out less than you put in - again the Universe requires this and we don't get to change the rules on that.
If you are more fortunate than others, build a larger table not a taller fence.

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hollus
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Re: Toto Wolf - Formula 1 should be leading the pack in sustainable fuels and biofuels instead of electric

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RedNEO wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 19:57
The reason it results in less carbon in the atmosphere is because it simply outputs less carbon than it extracts from the atmosphere. Thats what net zero emissions is
Why would you do that? Output the same carbon you input? Sure. Remove extra? Why? You could not have done it. Once you are removing extra carbon... Why not remove twice as much extra carbon? Why not 3 times as much?
If you are removing extra (burying it?!), you are a charity, and once you are a charity, you might just as well just remove carbon from the atmosphere and not produce any fuel.
Or, if we are going to disregard conservation of mass, etc., might just as well produce fuel and remove all CO2 from the atmosphere?
Yes, I am going to hyperbole big time, but the argument of going beyond carbon neutral and removing extra carbon does not resist a reductio ad absurdum. When they say zero, they mean net zero, as in carbon neutral.
In my opinion. (I don’t own the truth any more than any one else)
Rivals, not enemies.

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Re: Toto Wolf - Formula 1 should be leading the pack in sustainable fuels and biofuels instead of electric

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hollus wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 20:45
RedNEO wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 19:57
The reason it results in less carbon in the atmosphere is because it simply outputs less carbon than it extracts from the atmosphere. Thats what net zero emissions is
Why would you do that? Output the same carbon you input? Sure. Remove extra? Why? You could not have done it. Once you are removing extra carbon... Why not remove twice as much extra carbon? Why not 3 times as much?
If you are removing extra (burying it?!), you are a charity, and once you are a charity, you might just as well just remove carbon from the atmosphere and not produce any fuel.
Or, if we are going to disregard conservation of mass, etc., might just as well produce fuel and remove all CO2 from the atmosphere?
Yes, I am going to hyperbole big time, but the argument of going beyond carbon neutral and removing extra carbon does not resist a reductio ad absurdum. When they say zero, they mean net zero, as in carbon neutral.
In my opinion. (I don’t own the truth any more than any one else)
Carbon neutral just means they produce the same amount they extract. So overall nothing added. If it’s net zero what they are doing is mixing what they have extracted with something else they have extracted from the atmosphere, in this case hydrogen to produce the same amount of fuel and a net loss of carbon in the atmosphere. At least that’s my understanding.. it’s a process that’s still ongoing to be net zero but they have already achieved carbon neutrality which is why manufacturers can now fully get behind it.

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Re: Toto Wolf - Formula 1 should be leading the pack in sustainable fuels and biofuels instead of electric

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DChemTech wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 18:55
.... You cannot just dismiss emissions of particulate matter, nitrogen components &c from biofuels as 'non existing'. Those emissions do exist.
these emissions (essentially) do not exist
as they don't exist in levels unsafe to public health
plus most particulate comes from 'green' heating not from vehicles

if ICEs produced more particulate (from biofuels) this could reduce atmospheric CO2

greenists might be more convincing if they didn't do their straw man things

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RedNEO
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Re: Toto Wolf - Formula 1 should be leading the pack in sustainable fuels and biofuels instead of electric

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Just_a_fan wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 20:41
RedNEO wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 19:57
Just_a_fan wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 19:41

So you've never heard of NOx? Or particulates? OK.

Please show how taking carbon out of the atmosphere, putting it in a fuel and then burning that fuel results in less carbon in the atmosphere at the end of the process.
The reason it results in less carbon in the atmosphere is because it simply outputs less carbon than it extracts from the atmosphere.
How does burning a fuel produce less carbon dioxide than went in to making that fuel? "Petrol" is C(n)H(2n+2) - that's going to be the same with these "biofuels" because they're just making "petrol" from the air. You burn it in ideal conditions and you get CO2 and H2O. But you don't get ideal conditions in any engine so you get CO2, CO, H2O, NOx, particulates (these are soot which is, you guessed it, carbon) etc. The amount of C out is the same as the amount of C in. It doesn't matter who funded the research and who backs it, the chemistry is set by the Universe and it doesn't care.

In principle one could make the biofuel so pure that it contained no other atoms other than C and H and that would help with other pollutants such as sulphur, but as most petrol these days is extremely low in sulphur anyway, that's a minor gain.

And in order to make all of this biofuel, you need energy. Now that can be from the Sun via photosynthesis (growing the fuel) or via PV, or via wind turbines, or hydro, but it all needs energy. And you get out less than you put in - again the Universe requires this and we don't get to change the rules on that.
Perhaps this link will explain it better than I ever could..
https://energypost.eu/extract-co2-from- ... tic-fuels/

DChemTech
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Re: Toto Wolf - Formula 1 should be leading the pack in sustainable fuels and biofuels instead of electric

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RedNEO wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 19:04


I did read it. Did you read mine? Perhaps you wouldn’t have corrected me if you did because I said net zero is when more carbon will be being extracted than put back in. Anyway I’ve already pointed why biofuels are better at doing what batteries were trying to do but now it’s become about ‘whataboutisms’. It’s not about not liking batteries it’s just I share the opinion of Toto that biofuels solve a problem better than they could. If you think they are not as efficient thats fine, but they have far more benefits than losses and remember it’s only the second generation of biofuels and they have already achieved carbon neutrality.
Yes, I noticed you had conflicting statements on carbon neutrality in that post. I can't smell which one to take seriously and which one to discard, so I picked the first statement - which you seem to use in later posts, too, anyway.

You haven't actually addressed why biofuels are batteries in the long run, or in the consumer car market at which engine development would be targeted. You simply waived any comments on that, or provided a strawman response. The comments you received were not 'whataboutisms', but addressed valid aspects that deserve further discussion in deciding whether ICEs, biofuels and synfuels are a viable, long term option for consumer cars (and hence whether further development of them is warranted).

Your argument so far seems to be hinging on 2 points.
1: Toto says X, so that is the truth and I agree with it (which is an argument from authority)
2: Battery production comes with huge emissions, while biofuels are carbon neutral (which is a fallacy too).

How exactly do you think that biofuels are produced carbon neutral (it's not important which generation they are in this question, per se)? The equipment to harvest biomass runs on gasoline or diesel. Most processing steps are heated with gas, and carbon isn't captured and stored. Some may be electric, but with grid energy - which is a mixture of sources, including fuel. The practical way to claim carbon neutrality in that case is to use (1) green energy certificates to claim the grid energy you use is green, and (2) offsetting the carbon emissions from the other processing steps. The thing is, of course, the exact same thing applies to batteries. You can buy green energy certificates for the grid energy used to produce batteries (and the electricity for car usage), and you can offset the other emissions of battery production. If biofuel producers can claim their biofuels are net zero emission if they offset production emissions, then battery producers can claim net zero emission if they offset production emissions. Otherwise, if you want to keep complaining that battery production is causing substantial gross emissions, then you need to accept that biofuel production is causing substantial gross emissions, too. You cannot complain about the one and waive the other, which has been pointed out numerous times, yet you keep committing exactly this fallacy.

And, net zero CO2 emissions does not remove the other secondary emissions of both options. For batteries, the social and environmental impact of lithium, cobalt and graphite mining for example. For biofuels, the land use, nutrient runoff, impact on land and water quality, pesticide use, etcetera. If you want to have a fair assessment of which tech has the biggest impact, you need to assess those aspects. It's quite hard for 2nd generation biofuels because they are a co-product of food production, but because it's hard in practice does not mean it can be ignored.

Also, I did not claim batteries are better at this stage than biofuels. I don't know if they are, I have not had the time to delve deep into LCAs and such. I stated they have more potential, for a number of reasons that were listed several times. First and foremost, because the available biomass is hardly sufficient to cover aviation fuel demands, and because aviation has the biggest need for liquid fuels. So you need alternatives for consumer cars if you want to step away from fossil, and there battery tech has simply has the best papers. Despite it being mentioned several times, you didn't address this.

The second argument is that there is much more development potential in battery tech. The processing steps for 2nd generation bio can be somewhat more efficient, but it won't be a huge deal more. For battery tech, prices keep dropping substantially, energy costs per kWh storage capacity, too, and the environmental footprint via efficiency gains as well (which seems to be your biggest concern). Of course, a more-and-more green energy grid also has an impact (if we consider gross emissions), but that applies equally to battery tech and biofuels.

DChemTech
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Re: Toto Wolf - Formula 1 should be leading the pack in sustainable fuels and biofuels instead of electric

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Tommy Cookers wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 21:03
DChemTech wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 18:55
.... You cannot just dismiss emissions of particulate matter, nitrogen components &c from biofuels as 'non existing'. Those emissions do exist.
these emissions (essentially) do not exist
as they don't exist in levels unsafe to public health
plus most particulate comes from 'green' heating not from vehicles

if ICEs produced more particulate (from biofuels) this could reduce atmospheric CO2

greenists might be more convincing if they didn't do their straw man things
I agree they are a minor aspect, still, they play a role in smog formation, and fossil fuel emissions altogether (of which cars are a fraction) do have a health impact, especially on the lungs.

I do admit particulate matter from wood heating is an issue too, and I would like to see that addressed. Still, that does not make it right to dismiss such emissions from ICE-based traffic (or brake dust from EVs).

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hollus
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Re: Toto Wolf - Formula 1 should be leading the pack in sustainable fuels and biofuels instead of electric

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From your link, @RedNEO:
Extracting CO2 from the air is one of the best ways to reverse climate change without resorting to expensive technologies, convoluted tax schemes or preventing billions of people from getting the energy they need to have a good life.

If you could then make gasoline, diesel, or jet fuel from it, then you’d kill two birds with one stone.
That’s what most people call carbon neutral. Only a marketing type would call that zero carbon.

You take carbon out of the atmosphere.
You make fuel with it.
You use that fuel.
The exhaust puts the same carbon back in the atmosphere.

That is carbon neutral, AKA net zero.

I think what you call zero is called negative by most people (in a CO2 context). In which case we are discussing semantics and word meanings rather than technologies.
Rivals, not enemies.

Tommy Cookers
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Re: Toto Wolf - Formula 1 should be leading the pack in sustainable fuels and biofuels instead of electric

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DChemTech wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 21:19
Tommy Cookers wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 21:03
DChemTech wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 18:55
.... You cannot just dismiss emissions of particulate matter, nitrogen components &c from biofuels as 'non existing'. Those emissions do exist.
these emissions (essentially) do not exist
as they don't exist in levels unsafe to public health
plus most particulate comes from 'green' heating not from vehicles
if ICEs produced more particulate (from biofuels) this could reduce atmospheric CO2
greenists might be more convincing if they didn't do their straw man things
I agree they are a minor aspect, still, they play a role in smog formation, and fossil fuel emissions altogether (of which cars are a fraction) do have a health impact, especially on the lungs.
I do admit particulate matter from wood heating is an issue too, and I would like to see that addressed. Still, that does not make it right to dismiss such emissions from ICE-based traffic (or brake dust from EVs).
more straw-manning
(attacking what I said to direct attention from your false attribution of biofuel deficiencies)

and I am right to dismiss such emissions -
because the authorities have determined that they are safe (that's what the permitted level is)

unless greenists are allowed to quote 'the Government' only when that suits green causes
Last edited by Tommy Cookers on 22 Dec 2020, 21:32, edited 1 time in total.

DChemTech
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Re: Toto Wolf - Formula 1 should be leading the pack in sustainable fuels and biofuels instead of electric

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Tommy Cookers wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 21:25
DChemTech wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 21:19
Tommy Cookers wrote:
22 Dec 2020, 21:03

these emissions (essentially) do not exist
as they don't exist in levels unsafe to public health
plus most particulate comes from 'green' heating not from vehicles
if ICEs produced more particulate (from biofuels) this could reduce atmospheric CO2
greenists might be more convincing if they didn't do their straw man things
I agree they are a minor aspect, still, they play a role in smog formation, and fossil fuel emissions altogether (of which cars are a fraction) do have a health impact, especially on the lungs.
I do admit particulate matter from wood heating is an issue too, and I would like to see that addressed. Still, that does not make it right to dismiss such emissions from ICE-based traffic (or brake dust from EVs).
more straw-manning
(attacking what I said to direct attention from your false attribution of biofuel deficiencies)
I think I made a fairly reasonable response to your post, but feel free to elaborate why/what I am misrepresenting and I'd happily address it.