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In a word: not much – at least not for what you get. Whether
you buy it or make it yourself, the benefits of biodiesel far outweigh
the biodiesel cost in so many ways. This article, examines the actual
financial biodiesel cost – both biodiesel prices for those
who choose to buy theirs from biodiesel production companies and for
making biodiesel oneself.
How do biodiesel prices compare with other fuel costs, mile for mile?
• B100 or 100% biodiesel cost an average of 8.2 cents per
mile, and gets:o 37 miles per gallon in the city; o 45 miles per gallon
on the highway;
• Unleaded gasoline cost an average of 6.9 cents per mile, and
gets: o 25 miles per gallon in the city; o 31 miles per gallon on the
highway;
• B20 or a mixture of 80% petroleum-based diesel and 20%
biodiesel cost 6.0 cents per mile, and gets: o 37 miles per gallon in
the city; o 45 miles per gallon on the highway;
• Conventional, petroleum-based diesel cost an average of 5.2
cents per mile, and gets: o 38 miles per gallon in the city; o 46 miles
per gallon on the highway.
The mileage one gets from using biodiesel as compared with regular,
unleaded gasoline more than makes up for the slightly higher biodiesel
cost, especially when you consider that biodiesel prices should only go
down over time, whereas the cost of crude oil, and therefore the price
of gas at the pump, is only expected to rise or, at best, settle off
somewhere around current prices.
By the same token, the fact that conventional diesel fuel is the
cheapest of all of them and gets the best mileage in no way discounts
the cost-effectiveness of using biodiesel. Again, while gas and diesel
prices are rising, biodiesel cost is expected to soften. A gallon of
biodiesel cost $5 just 5 years ago. At the time of this writing
biodiesel cost $3.30-$3.50 and is getting lower all the time. (You can
find out the currently biodiesel cost as well as the prices for all
fuels both alternative and conventional, in a regular newsletter
published on the following U.S. DOE web page maintained by the Clean
Cities Alternative:
www.eere.energy.gov/afdc/resources/pricereport/price_report.html)
Not only that, but biodiesel also runs cleaner than its contemporaries,
and cleans and lubricates engines.
All of these factors contribute to prolonging engine life and reducing
vehicle maintenance costs.
Biodiesel is also good for the U.S. economy. A surge in biodiesel
demand, like the one we’re currently experiencing and which
is only expected to continue to swell, is expected within the next 10
years to create up to 50,000 new jobs for Americans.
Over the next 5 years, U.S. farmers could see their bottom line
increase by as much as $1 billion thanks to biodiesel. How, you ask? In
at least two ways.
First, if biodiesel takes off (so to speak), feedstock prices for
vegetable oils will steadily increase. The price of a bushel of
soybeans, for one, is projected to rise by $0.10 per year if biodiesel
overtook diesel and gasoline as our fuel of choice. Secondly, the
government is currently (and for a limited time only) offering
incentives in the form of tax credits on the cost of biodiesel
production (see our companion piece, “Government Incentives
and Tax Credits for Biodiesel Production & Sale”).
All this makes one thing abundantly clear – as biodiesel
becomes more widely used, it will only become more and more profitable,
while at the same time leading to a welcome decline in biodiesel prices
as well as the biodiesel cost of production.
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Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Mike_Cubert
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