SIM SUPER ELMer
<TOEICリスニング・リーディング特効薬!> オリジナル英文
 
<No.609>
Whisky Byproducts - the Next Car Fuel?
Scotland is the world’s largest whisky producer.

And a Scottish professor has discovered how to take the waste products from distilling whisky and turn them into biobutanol, an alcohol that can be used as fuel.

Martin Tangney founded Celtic Renewables, an Edinburgh-based company that is producing biobutanol at a plant in Belgium.

"In the production of whisky, less than 10 percent of what comes out of the distillery is actually the primary product.

The bulk of the remainder are these unwanted residues - pot ale and barley."

Those residues are combined to create a new raw material.

And by adapting a century-old fermentation process, it is converted into biobutanol.

The whisky-based biofuel provides more power than bioethanol, which is made from corn or sugar cane.

"It has almost the same amount of energy as petrol, whereas bioethanol has only got 70 percent of it.

You can store it, and pipe it, and use the existing infrastructure to distribute this, and in fact, you do not need to modify an engine."

Tangney doesn’t expect biobutanol to replace gasoline altogether, but be blended with it.

It’s possible the fuel may also be used in planes and ships, and in heaters.

He says consumers would also be helping the environment.

"They are in fact helping the planet and can reduce amount of oil that we consume by putting this into their cars."

Celtic Renewables has received a $17 million grant from the British government to build a plant in Scotland that’s expected to be operational within three years.

Deborah Block, VOA News, Washington
 

東京SIM外語研究所
tokyosim@tokyo-sim.com

SIMロゴ

▲Page Top
Copyright (C) 2003 Tokyo-SIM. All Rights Reserved.
特定商取引法に基づく表示 会社概要 厚生労働大臣指定講座