By Brendan I. Koerner
Posted Tuesday, April 1, 2008, at 8:04 AM ET
I recently returned from an extended stay in Europe, where
most new cars run on diesel. Those cars are typically a lot more
fuel-efficient than our gas guzzlers, which makes me wonder why there
aren't more diesels on American roads. I know that diesel has a
reputation for causing dirtier tailpipe emissions than petrol, but
isn't that a bygone problem?
Technological wizardry has,
indeed, made diesel-powered vehicles vastly cleaner than in olden days.
As a result, lots of gearheads are touting diesels as finally safe
enough for American motorists, who will dig the cars' impressive
fuel-economy numbers. There's considerable excitement on these shores,
for example, over the impending arrival of the 2009 Volkswagen Jetta TDi,
a "clean diesel" vehicle that purportedly gets 50 miles per gallon on
the highway yet spews out far less soot than the diesels of yore, which
wreaked havoc on air quality. So will the erstwhile environmental
boogeyman of diesel fuel end up saving us all? The Lantern is still far
from convinced.
Diesel, named after German engineer Rudolf Diesel,
has traditionally been simpler to refine than gasoline, although making
it also requires more crude oil per gallon. The end result is a fuel
that boasts much greater energy density than gasoline, which explains
why diesel cars get up to 40 percent more miles per gallon than their
petrol counterparts. The higher energy density also means that burning
a gallon of diesel emits more greenhouse gases than burning a gallon of
gasoline—about 15 percent more, to be specific. But due to the
appreciable fuel-economy savings, diesel cars usually emit less of
these gases per mile driven.
There's a more disturbing difference between diesel and gasoline: Burning diesel also emits nasty particulates and smog-forming nitrogen oxides, as should be apparent to anyone who's ever gotten a mouthful of bus or tractor exhaust.
The
good news is that today's diesel contains significantly less sulfur
than in years past, resulting in much less harmful soot. On top of
that, new diesel cars are outfitted with ingenious emissions-control
systems such as BlueTec, which treats exhaust with a urea-based solution to reduce its toxicity.
But these improvements have come with costs. According to the Union of Concerned Scientists
(PDF), manufacturing a gallon of the new, low-sulfur diesel requires
even more crude oil than the old diesel. Also, diesel engines are more
complicated than petrol engines and thus require more energy and
materials to manufacture.
Still, a diesel car's improved fuel
economy can offset these drawbacks. The UCS recommends that car
shoppers revise a diesel vehicle's miles-per-gallon rating downward by
20 percent in order to get a more accurate picture of the overall
impact on oil consumption.
Fans of the forthcoming Jetta TDi
point out that the car's tailpipe emissions are clean enough to pass
muster in California, a state with exceptionally tough emissions
regulations. Yet the diesel TDi still lags behind many other vehicles
that meet California's stringent requirements, including the gas-powered 2008 Jetta, which qualifies as a partial zero-emissions vehicle.
The
relative dirtiness of even the most advanced diesels worries some
researchers, who argue that the resulting soot (which they term "black
carbon") may be a key factor in global warming. According to a 2002 Stanford University study,
even if all diesels were designed to meet California's emissions
standards, diesel cars could still warm the globe more than petrol cars
over the next half-century.
None of this is to imply that
gasoline is necessarily more eco-friendly than diesel—the two fuels
just have different pluses and minuses. European regulators seem to
care more about reducing the continent's greenhouse-gas emissions than
its particulate emissions and so have favored policies that prop up
diesel. As you probably learned during your foreign sojourn, diesel is
cheaper than petrol in virtually all of Europe, largely due to its
being more lightly taxed (though maybe not for long). The opposite is true here in the United States, where diesel tends to cost significantly more
than regular gasoline—in part because our new, low-sulfur diesel is
more expensive to manufacture, but also because of a higher federal
per-gallon tax.
The wild card here is the ongoing development of biodiesel,
which can drastically reduce a diesel vehicle's tailpipe emissions.
Perhaps more importantly, it can also be made from domestic crops: In
the United States, the chief source is soybeans, while Europeans prefer
canola.
To calculate the environmental benefit of biodiesel is a
complex task and one the Lantern hopes to accomplish in an upcoming
column. Simply put, though, not all biodiesels are created equal: Some may require too much production energy and arable land to justify the effort from an environmental standpoint.
We
can hope that a number of well-done life-cycle analyses of biodiesel
are in the works, so we'll soon know whether Malaysian palm is the
future. In the meantime, though, the Lantern looks forward to
test-driving the 2009 Jetta TDi—not only because it's supposedly a
great ride but also to determine whether Volkswagen is telling the
truth about those fuel economy figures. After all, wasn't the Toyota
Prius supposed to get 60 miles per gallon in the city? The Lantern's
alter ego could barely get more than 50.
http://www.slate.com/id/2187806