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E85 - Availability |  | E85 - Availability: Encyclopedia II - E85 - Availability |  | The fuel is widely used in Sweden and is becoming increasingly common in the United States, mainly in the Midwest where corn is a major crop and is the primary source material for ethanol fuel production. Minnesota has the largest number of E85 fuel pumps of any U.S. state, with 158 of the 400+ pumps in the country. As of July 2005, Illinois has the second-greatest number of E85 pumps (about 60); most other states have fewer than two dozen. Even in Minnesota, the ethanol pumps represent a tiny fraction of the fuel outlets—there are about 4 ...
See also:E85, E85 - Availability, E85 - Cost, E85 - Use in Flexible-fuel engines, E85 - Experimental use in standard engines, E85 - Risks of use in standard engines, E85 - After-market Conversion Kits and conversions, E85 - Technical details on Air Fuel Ratios required for burning E85 gasoline and ethanol, E85 - Examples of currently-produced E85 flexible fuel vehicles, E85 - Europe, E85 - USA, E85 - Brazil |  | | E85, E85 - After-market Conversion Kits and conversions, E85 - Availability, E85 - Brazil, E85 - Cost, E85 - Europe, E85 - Examples of currently-produced E85 flexible fuel vehicles, E85 - Experimental use in standard engines, E85 - Risks of use in standard engines, E85 - Technical details on Air Fuel Ratios required for burning E85 gasoline and ethanol, E85 - USA, E85 - Use in Flexible-fuel engines, Air-fuel ratio, Alcohol fuel, Common alcohol fuel mixtures – common ratios other than 85%/15%., Earth's atmosphere, Fuel injection, Homebrewing – making E85 at home, Lambda sensor – also known as an oxygen sensor, used to measure lean versus rich combustion conditions, Methanol – wood alcohol, not to be confused with ethanol (grain alcohol), Stoichiometry – thermodynamics issues for obtaining the proper air fuel mixture for complete combustion, Timeline of alcohol fuel |  | |
|  |  | E85: Encyclopedia II - E85 - Availability
E85 - Availability
The fuel is widely used in Sweden and is becoming increasingly common in the United States, mainly in the Midwest where corn is a major crop and is the primary source material for ethanol fuel production. Minnesota has the largest number of E85 fuel pumps of any U.S. state, with 158 of the 400+ pumps in the country. As of July 2005, Illinois has the second-greatest number of E85 pumps (about 60); most other states have fewer than two dozen. Even in Minnesota, the ethanol pumps represent a tiny fraction of the fuel outlets—there are about 4,000 gas stations in the state, each with several individual pumps (however, all stations there are required to carry E10, a 10% mixture of ethanol and gasoline).
Concerns about rising gasoline prices and energy dependence have led to a resurgence of interest in E85 fuel; for example, Nebraska mandated the use of E85 in state vehicles whenever possible in May 2005. Similarly, whereas selling any fuel containing more than 10% ethanol is still currently illegal in some states, even this is rapidly changing. For example, Florida proposed changing state law to permit the sale of alternative fuels such as E85 at an October 7, 2005 meeting, and held public hearings on October 24th. The expected outcome of having held this hearing is the changing of Florida state law to permit the selling of alternative fuels such as E85 by the end of 2005 to the general public. (Currently, only county, state, and Federal fleet vehicles may purchase E85 in Florida, from only 3 pumps in the state.) Several other states have similar laws still on their books that prevent the sale of E85 to the general public. The expected general outcome, though, is the rapidly widening acceptance of E85 sales to the general public in all of the United States by the end of 2006.
US Federal fleet flex-fuel vehicles (FFVs) are required to operate on alternative fuels 100% of the time upon the signing of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 into law by President Bush on August 8, 2005. (See Section 701 for this requirement). Formerly, such FFVs were required to be operated by the end of 2005 on alternative fuels only 51% of the time (i.e., the majority of the time) by Executive Order 13149. (See Executive Order 13149 [1], dated April 21, 2000.) This means that the US Government's use of E85 is effectively doubled as of August 8, 2005 with the signing into law of the Energy Policy Act of 2005. This jump in consumption had the unintended effect of limiting public availability of E85 coincident with shortages of gasoline due to impacts of hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico during the 2005 hurricane season. Although the price of corn had not changed greatly, the usage of E85 nonetheless jumped, thereby creating a shortage of E85, and causing E85 prices to rise coincident with gasoline prices during the 2005 Hurricane Season.
Other related archives2005, Chevrolet Astra, Chevrolet Avalanche, Chrysler Sebring, Citroën C3, Dodge Caravan, Fiat Palio, Ford Crown Victoria, Ford Fiesta, Ford Focus, GMC Sierra, Peugeot 206, Renault Clio, Saab 9-5, Volkswagen Gol, Volvo S40, Air-fuel ratio, Alcohol fuel, BioPower, Brazil, Chevrolet Astra, Chevrolet Corsa, Common alcohol fuel mixtures, Corsa, Durango, E10, ECU, Earth's atmosphere, Energy Policy Act of 2005, F-150, FFVs, Family 1, Family II, Flexible-fuel vehicles, Florida, Focus C-MAX, Fox, Fuel injection, General Motors, Grand Caravan, Grand Marquis, Gulf of Mexico, Henry Ford, Homebrewing, Hurricane Katrina, Hurricane Rita, Illinois, Impala, Kombi, Lambda sensor, May, Meriva, Methanol, Midwest, Mille, Minnesota, Model A, Model T, Montana, Nebraska, OBDII, Ram Pickup, Saab, Scénic, Siena, Silverado, Stoichiometry, Stratus, Suburban, Sweden, Tahoe, Taurus, Timeline of alcohol fuel, U.S. state, United States, V50, Yukon, Zafira, acetaldehyde, acetic acid, adsorb, adsorbed, alcohol fuel, alkali metals, angstrom, azeotrope, carburetor, catalyst, catalytic converter, corn, crop, detonation, ethanol, flexible-fuel vehicles, formic acid, fuel, fuel economy, fuel injection, gas stations, gasoline, hydroxyl group, internal-combustion engines, knock, lambda sensor, light truck, mass, methanol, molar, molecular sieve, molecule, nitride, octane rating, sedans, sport-utility vehicles, station wagons, stoichiometry, straight-4, terne, turbocharged, volume, zeolite
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Availability", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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