VIN WAS THE DIESEL ENGINE
OF THE PLOT VEHICLE
Is Diesel
Performance Superior Overall Compared to Gasoline Power?
At one time, diesel cars were a
relatively common sight in the United States. In Europe, they still are,
accounting for about 40% of new cars sold each year. Diesel fuel has higher
energy content than gasoline, and diesel performance is usually better in terms
of engine output. These factors also mean that vehicles running on diesel put
less global-warming pollution into the air. Thus, it might seem that in today's
world of rising temperatures and fuel prices, diesel is ripe for a surge in
popularity in North America.
Ah, ah, ah. Not so fast. Good diesel
performance may mean better fuel economy less carbon dioxide, but what about diesel's
problems with other types of air pollutants? What about the higher up-front
cost of diesel technology? There's also a catch when it comes to comparing
mileage estimates on new diesel and gasoline vehicles.
Today's article, adapted from materials made available by the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), discusses the pros and cons of diesel vehicles and compares them to their gasoline counterparts.
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DIESEL OR GASOLINE?
Fuel for Thought
By Patricia Monahan
and David Friedman, UCS
DIESEL PERFORMANCE
--- EXTRA POWER, HIGHER EFFICIENCY, BUT ....
If you or your parents owned a diesel car 20 years ago, you may have some bad memories of the experience. American drivers have steered clear of diesel since the early 1980s because many of the cars were unreliable, noisy, and polluting. Though today's diesel cars have overcome most of their past performance problems, they account for only a few percent of new automobile and truck sales in the US.
In Europe, on the other hand, about 40% of new cars sold are diesel, amounting to more than five million vehicles each year. The demand for diesel in Europe is fueled by the high cost of gasoline. (Unequal taxation of the two fuels results in diesel costing about one dollar less per gallon in most European countries.)
Over the past few years, diesel's popularity as an automotive fuel has grown significantly. Thanks to its higher energy content and its efficient combustion process, diesel performance enables cars to travel at least 30% farther on a gallon of fuel than comparable gasoline models.
The improved efficiency of diesel engines can also help
reduce oil consumption. It should be noted,
however, that it takes about 25% more oil to make a gallon of diesel fuel than
a gallon of gasoline, so we should really look at how a vehicle does on fuel
efficiency in terms of "oil equivalents." Thus , we need to adjust
the mileage claims for diesel vehicles downward by about 20% when comparing
them to gasoline-powered vehicles.
DIESEL -
EXTRA POLLUTION
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Americans continue to perceive diesel as a
"dirty" fuel, though today that image is only
partly deserved. Because of their lower
per-mile fuel consumption, diesel engines generally release less carbon
dioxide—the heat-tapping gas primarily responsible for global warming—from the
tailpipe. So that's a check on the good side of the
pollution chart. But when it comes to
smog-forming pollutants and toxic particulate matter, also known as soot,
today's diesels are still a lot dirtier than the average gasoline car.
There are three size categories
of soot particles:
Soot also finds other ways to harm your body, including:
All this means that diesel pollution can be deadly, causing premature mortality through cancer or heart and respiratory illnesses. The California Air Resources Board has concluded that diesel soot is responsible for 70% of the state's risk of cancer from airborne toxics. In the population as a whole, studies have shown a 26% increase in mortality in people living in soot-polluted cities.
THE DIESEL
POLLUTION SOLUTION --- AND ITS LIMITATIONS
To address diesel's emissions problems, tougher emissions rules are coming into effect. To meet the tougher pollution standards, high-tech diesel engines need low-sulfur diesel fuel. Unfortunately, US Department of Energy modeling has shown this fuel to be more oil- and carbon-intensive than reformulated gasoline.
Making a gallon of diesel fuel requires 25% more oil and emits 17% more heat-trapping greenhouse gases than gasoline reformulated with MTBE. Similarly, diesel requires 17% more oil and emits 18% more heat-trapping gases than gasoline reformulated with ethanol. This means that diesel fuel's advantages from its higher per-gallon energy content and better performance on greenhouse gases are partially offset by the impact of diesel's fuel-production process.
Still, future diesel vehicles, though perhaps not as cost-effective as gasoline, may have a role to play in reducing oil consumption and global warming pollution. Of the vehicles evaluated in the UCS report The Diesel Dilemma: Diesel's Role in the Race for Clean Cars { http://www.ucsusa.org/clean_vehicles/ cars_and_suvs/page.cfm?pageID=1307 }, full hybrid-electric diesels offered the maximum improvement in fuel economy as well as the greatest reduction in heat-trapping emissions. But a key challenge remaining is whether diesel vehicles will ever be able to deliver the same progress on other air pollutants that we've seen in today's gasoline-power technologies.
SO WHICH IS
BETTER OVERALL --- DEISEL OR GASOLINE?
Technologies are being developed that can make diesel much
cleaner and more fuel-efficient. But those advances have to be compared to continuing advancements
in gasoline-powered vehicles. The chart below compares diesel performance to gasoline
performance for a variety of characteristics. The more dark green (+ signs),
the better.

The chart above helps us determine which automotive choice is best when considering the following factors:
Diesel does have a slight advantage over gasoline in the first two categories. But UCS modeling suggests that the high up-front cost of engines and emission controls for diesel vehicles gives gasoline technology the edge overall. That means there is no mandate to bring back diesel in a big way---gasoline-powered cars, particularly gasoline-electric hybrids, are likely the best way to go.
POLICY
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR GASOLINE AND DEISEL VEHICLES
Here are a few broad recommendations
that can ensure the role diesel plays in our future vehicles will be a positive
one:
RESEARCH AND INSPECTIONS: Emission-control systems deteriorate with age, are sometimes tampered with, may be improperly maintained, or may have been poorly engineered in the first place. To ensure that actual emissions for vehicles---all vehicles, including diesel---match predictions, we should do more to monitor vehicles' real-world pollution performance. Inspection and maintenance programs can help and should be expanded to include diesel vehicles, particularly if diesel becomes more popular in the light-duty vehicle sector. We should also study the public health effects of non-regulated emissions to determine whether emissions standards are effective enough.
MILEAGE STANDARDS AND LABELING: To enable consumers to properly evaluate fuel-efficiency claims for new cars, mileage standards should compare gasoline and diesel on an energy-equivalent basis; that is, how efficiently they use a gallon of oil, not how far they go on a gallon of gasoline or diesel. Window stickers on new vehicles should be expanded and made more accurate to give consumers more information so they can evaluate the impact of their purchase on air quality, global warming, and energy security.
INCENTIVES: Protecting public health and improving vehicle fuel economy can and must be complementary goals. Incentives for vehicles with higher fuel economy and lower pollution---regardless of fuel type---can help increase production volume, lower costs, and raise consumer awareness of better vehicle technologies.
Whether we're talking about diesel or gasoline, improved vehicle technology have the potential to cut oil usage and global warming pollution by more than 50% while saving consumers money and protecting public health. It just takes the will to make it happen!
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The
Union of Concerned Scientists is an independent nonprofit alliance of more
than 100,000 concerned citizens and scientists. They combine scientific
analysis with innovative thinking to build a cleaner, healthier environment
and a safer world. Visit them at www.ucsusa.org. |
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Resources:
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Refs:
Primary adaptation from: http://www.ucsusa.org/publications/catalyst.cfm?publicationID=858
Diesel health effects from
"The Life of Soot": http://www.ucsusa.org/clean_vehicles/trucks_and_buses/page.cfm?pageID=1501
Also looked at:
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http://www.ucsusa.org/clean_vehicles/cars_and_suvs/page.cfm?pageID=1307
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http://www.emagazine.com/view/?2239
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