E20 Would Reduce Europe’s GHGs in Transport Sector
Source: By JOANNA SCHROEDER, AGwired • Posted: Monday, July 25, 2016
Building on previous research, this study focused on the introduction of E20 (20% ethanol, 80% gas) high-octane fuel, along with vehicles optimized to run more efficiently on the E20 fuel blend. Europe has set a goal of 12-20 percent reduction in emissions in the transport sector by 2030.
In particular the study found:
- Even after accounting for estimates of ILUC emissions, the use of biofuels results in significant well-to-wheel GHG reductions compared to the use of conventional fossil based fuels, i.e. petrol and diesel.
- Increasing the share of ethanol beyond 2020 levels further reduces GHG emissions. In particular, the highest GHG reductions in transport (14.1%) compared to 2005 are achieved when ethanol use is increased through the introduction of E20. This reduction is compared to a 9.3% GHG reduction in a scenario with no biofuels at all.
“European ethanol already makes a strong contribution to decarbonising Europe’s transport sector and can help to reduce the climate impacts of the fuels we use to power petrol cars,” noted Robert Wright, secretary-general of ePURE. “This study shows that ethanol’s climate benefits can be further enhanced through the use of higher ethanol blends. E20 fuel is a win-win for Europe’s climate because it significantly reduces emissions and its high-octane content increases engine efficiency resulting in less fuel consumption.”
Ricardo says its findings also validate a meta-analysis by the University of Vienna, which found that ethanol makes petrol combust more cleanly and efficiently. The study concludes that policy makers should explore the deployment of high-octane E20 fuel and vehicles with E20 optimized engines in the context of reducing transport emissions by 2030 and in the longer-term to 2050.