Revision as of 09:06, 1 May 2006 editMervyn (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users25,690 edits rewrite, add ref, 2 dead links← Previous edit | Revision as of 22:01, 6 May 2006 edit undo69.207.20.86 (talk)No edit summaryNext edit → | ||
Line 27: | Line 27: | ||
Taxation on SVO as a road fuel varies from country to country, and it is possible the revenue departments in many countries are even unaware of its use, or feel it sufficiently insignificant to legislate. Germany offers 0% taxation, resulting in their leading on most developments of the fuel use. There seems to be no clear taxation system in the USA, however given the low rate of fuel taxation, it is unlikely to face anything unfavourable, although charges could vary from state to state. In ] a pilot scheme is currently running (as of April 2006) whereby eight suppliers have been approved to sell SVO for use as a fuel without the payment of excise duty (VAT at 21% still applies, SVO from any other source still attracts exise duty at 36.8058 cents per litre plus 21% VAT). Despite its use being common in France, it would appear there has been no legislation to cover this. | Taxation on SVO as a road fuel varies from country to country, and it is possible the revenue departments in many countries are even unaware of its use, or feel it sufficiently insignificant to legislate. Germany offers 0% taxation, resulting in their leading on most developments of the fuel use. There seems to be no clear taxation system in the USA, however given the low rate of fuel taxation, it is unlikely to face anything unfavourable, although charges could vary from state to state. In ] a pilot scheme is currently running (as of April 2006) whereby eight suppliers have been approved to sell SVO for use as a fuel without the payment of excise duty (VAT at 21% still applies, SVO from any other source still attracts exise duty at 36.8058 cents per litre plus 21% VAT). Despite its use being common in France, it would appear there has been no legislation to cover this. | ||
In the UK, drivers using SVO have been prosecuted for failure to pay duty to ]. The rate of taxation on SVO was originally set at a reduced rate of 27.1p per litre, but in late 2005, HMRC started to enforce the full diesel excise rate of 47.1p per litre. HMRC argued that SVOs on the market from small producers did not meet the official definition of "biodiesel" in Section 2AA of The Hydrocarbon Oil Duties Act 1979 (HODA), and consequently was merely a "fuel substitute" chargeable at the normal diesel rate. Such a policy seemed to contradict the UK Government's commitments to the ] and to many EU directives and had many consequences, including an attempt to make the increase retrospective, with one organisation being hit with a £16,000 back tax bill. Such a change in the interpretation of excise duty |
In the UK, drivers using SVO have been prosecuted for failure to pay duty to ]. The rate of taxation on SVO was originally set at a reduced rate of 27.1p per litre, but in late 2005, HMRC started to enforce the full diesel excise rate of 47.1p per litre. HMRC argued that SVOs on the market from small producers did not meet the official definition of "biodiesel" in Section 2AA of The Hydrocarbon Oil Duties Act 1979 (HODA), and consequently was merely a "fuel substitute" chargeable at the normal diesel rate. Such a policy seemed to contradict the UK Government's commitments to the ] and to many EU directives and had many consequences, including an attempt to make the increase retrospective, with one organisation being hit with a £16,000 back tax bill. Such a change in the interpretation of excise duty effectively makes use of SVO in the UK nonviable by all but environmentalists, as the combined price of SVO and taxation for its use considerably exceeds the price of mineral diesel. HMRC's interpretation is being widely challenged by the SVO industry. <ref>Source: </ref> | ||
==Further reading== | ==Further reading== |
Revision as of 22:01, 6 May 2006
Definition
Straight Vegetable Oil (SVO) is a fuel for diesel engines that can be either pure new vegetable oil or Waste vegetable oil that has been cleaned, although this is normally referred to as WVO. Vegetable oil used as fuel in a compression ignition or diesel engine is also referred to as vegidiesel or vegifuel. The most noticeable difference between an engine running on diesel and SVO is that the latter is quieter, but (with rapeseed based SVO) only produces 96% of the equivalent power of diesel.
The original diesel engine was designed to run on peanut oil, so SVO burns well in some diesel engines. However, due to its relatively high viscosity, using SVO with unmodified engines can lead to poor atomisation of the fuel, incomplete combustion, coking in the injectors, ring carbonisation, and accumulation of fuel in the lubricating oil.
Application and usability
Most diesel car engines are suitable for the use of SVO with modifications. One common solution is to add an additional fuel tank, one for SVO and a separate tank of diesel (petrodiesel or biodiesel) and an electric valve to switch between them. The viscosity of the SVO is reduced by preheating it using heat from the engine; the engine is started on diesel, switched over to SVO as soon as it is warmed up and switched back to diesel shortly before being switched off to ensure it has no SVO in it when it is started from cold again. In colder climates it is often necessary to heat the SVO’s fuel lines and tank as it can become very viscous. Another common solution (the one-tank system) is to add electric pre-heating of the fuel and if necessary upgrade the injection pumps and glow-plugs to allow SVO fuel use with one tank.
With unmodified engines the unfavourable effects can be reduced by blending, or “cutting”, the SVO with diesel fuel. For normal use, without either blending or a second tank and associated modifications in a petrodiesel engine, vegetable oil has to be transesterified to biodiesel.
Many cars powered by indirect injection engines supplied by inline injection pumps, or mechanical Bosch injection pumps are capable to run on pure SVO in all but winter temperatures. Turbo diesels tend to run better due to the increased pressure in the injectors. Pre-CDI Mercedes and cars featuring the PSA XUD engine tend to perform well too, especially as the latter is normally equipped with a coolant heated fuel filter.
Properties
The main form of SVO used in the UK is rapeseed oil which has a freezing point of -10°C, however the use of sunflower oil which freezes at -17°C is currently being investigated as a means of improving cold weather starting. Unfortunately oils with lower gelling points tend to be less saturated (leading to a higher iodine number) and polymerize more easily in the presence of atmospheric oxygen.
Cetane number is highest with coconut oil, palm stearine, palm kernel, palm oil, palm oleine, lard and tallow. Coconut oil, palm oil, palm stearine, tallow and lard have the lowest iodine numbers.
Examples
Some Pacific island nations are using coconut oil as fuel to reduce their expenses and their dependence on imported fuels while helping stabilize the coconut oil market. Coconut oil is only usable where temperatures do not drop below 17 degrees Celsius (62 degrees Fahrenheit), unless two-tank SVO kits or other tank-heating accessories, etc. are used. Fortunately, the same techniques developed to use, for example, Canola and other oils in cold climates can be implemented to make coconut oil useable in temperatures lower than 17 degrees Celsius.
Taxation of fuel
Taxation on SVO as a road fuel varies from country to country, and it is possible the revenue departments in many countries are even unaware of its use, or feel it sufficiently insignificant to legislate. Germany offers 0% taxation, resulting in their leading on most developments of the fuel use. There seems to be no clear taxation system in the USA, however given the low rate of fuel taxation, it is unlikely to face anything unfavourable, although charges could vary from state to state. In Ireland a pilot scheme is currently running (as of April 2006) whereby eight suppliers have been approved to sell SVO for use as a fuel without the payment of excise duty (VAT at 21% still applies, SVO from any other source still attracts exise duty at 36.8058 cents per litre plus 21% VAT). Despite its use being common in France, it would appear there has been no legislation to cover this.
In the UK, drivers using SVO have been prosecuted for failure to pay duty to Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs. The rate of taxation on SVO was originally set at a reduced rate of 27.1p per litre, but in late 2005, HMRC started to enforce the full diesel excise rate of 47.1p per litre. HMRC argued that SVOs on the market from small producers did not meet the official definition of "biodiesel" in Section 2AA of The Hydrocarbon Oil Duties Act 1979 (HODA), and consequently was merely a "fuel substitute" chargeable at the normal diesel rate. Such a policy seemed to contradict the UK Government's commitments to the Kyoto Protocol and to many EU directives and had many consequences, including an attempt to make the increase retrospective, with one organisation being hit with a £16,000 back tax bill. Such a change in the interpretation of excise duty effectively makes use of SVO in the UK nonviable by all but environmentalists, as the combined price of SVO and taxation for its use considerably exceeds the price of mineral diesel. HMRC's interpretation is being widely challenged by the SVO industry.
Further reading
- From the Fryer to the Fuel Tank by Joshua Tickell ISBN 0970722702 Published by Greenteach.
References
External links
- Southern Grease - A great beginner's tutorial on using Vegetable oil as fuel in diesel engines
- www.wvofuels.com - A personal blog on my experiences using vegetable oil as fuel. Information on SVO conversion, making biodiesel, and Mercedes 300 Diesels.
- Vegcar.net - One man's recovery from petroleum dependence.
- Details in of SVO and WVO use in the UK
- Greasy Rider website and film
- SVO yields
- SVO characteristics
- Fuel-Duty and VAT on Pure Vegetable Oil (UK)