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BUSINESS LIFE: BUSINESS MOTORS: Diesel backed for another 50 years.


DIESEL will still be a key fuel for fleet vehicles for the next 50 years, despite rapid advances in alternative technologies, a new report suggests.

Although fuel cells could be available by 2010, research by the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders' Future Fuels Strategy Group says diesel could be used to power light-duty diesel hybrids until the mid 21st century.

It says: "For heavy-duty commercial vehicles (and perhaps for light-duty diesel hybrids) the continued use of diesel is foreseen fore·see  
tr.v. fore·saw , fore·seen , fore·see·ing, fore·sees
To see or know beforehand: foresaw the rapid increase in unemployment.
 well into the mid 21st century."

The report also warns that the advantage of using liquefied petroleum gas liquefied petroleum gas or LPG, mixture of gases, chiefly propane and butane, produced commercially from petroleum and stored under pressure to keep it in a liquid state.  could diminish.

"As emission limits become more stringent, the benefits of LPG LPG: see liquefied petroleum gas.

1. LPG - Linguaggio Procedure Grafiche (Italian for "Graphical Procedures Language"). dott. Gabriele Selmi. Roughly a cross between Fortran and APL, with graphical-oriented extensions and several peculiarities.
, other than a small carbon-dioxide emission reduction, will diminish."

The report identifies a belief among vehicle manufacturers and their partners that hydrogen promises to be a key fuel for the future, especially when made from renewable energy Renewable energy utilizes natural resources such as sunlight, wind, tides and geothermal heat, which are naturally replenished. Renewable energy technologies range from solar power, wind power, and hydroelectricity to biomass and biofuels for transportation.  sources.

"The technologies appropriate for using hydrogen as road fuel are likely to be the electrolytic e·lec·tro·lyt·ic
adj.
1. Of or relating to electrolysis.

2. Produced by electrolysis.

3. Of or relating to electrolytes.



e·lec
 fuel cell or the familiar spark ignition ignition, apparatus for igniting a combustible mixture. The German engineer Nikolaus A. Otto, in his first gas engine, used flame ignition; another method was heating a metal tube to incandescence.  engine", says the report.

Towards a Shared Vision - Future Fuels and Sustainable Mobility is the first report from the group, which has been set up to evaluate the long-term fuel options.

Christopher Macgowan, the SMMT's chief executive, said: "The group's aim is to develop a vision for the future and to bring the alternative fuels debate to as wide an audience as possible."
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Title Annotation:Business
Publication:Coventry Evening Telegraph (England)
Date:Oct 9, 2001
Words:233
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