Porsche eFuel. wait, what?

MrSpace

Legacy Member
Wow de l'espoir pour le moteur "conventionnel"

https://www.evo.co.uk/porsche/20332...he-performance-car-the-manufacturers-weigh-in

Porsche claims a car running on eFuel will have the same CO2 footprint as an EV, and BMW, Audi, Aston Martin and McLaren all agree

Porsche’s Vice President Motorsport and GT cars, Dr Frank Walliser, believes internal combustion engines using synthetic fuel, or eFuel, will make internal combustion cars as clean as an electric alternative. Speaking at the launch of the new 911 GT3, Dr Walliser explained that Porsche’s development of synthetic fuels is on course to start trials in 2022 and that this fuel could be used in all of Porsche’s current internal combustion engines without any requirements to modify them, including the all-new 992-generation GT3.

“Synthetic fuels are very important to allow us to reduce our CO2 output. Emissions are way better than current pump fuel, with less particulates and less NOx produced; synthetic fuels have between eight to ten components whereas petrol today has 30-40 and not all of them are welcome,” Walliser explained.

“Synthetic fuel is cleaner and there is no bi-product and when we start full production we expect a CO2 reduction of 85 percent. From a ‘well to wheel’ perspective - and you have to consider the well to wheel impact of all vehicles - this will be the same level of CO2 produced in the manufacture and use of an electric vehicle.”

Audi has also been working with its own partners on eFuels since 2009 and performance car OEMs such as McLaren and Aston Martin have also signalled its support of the technology. BMW M’s Head of Development, Dirk Hacker, also thinks eFuels are a viable option. Speaking ahead of the launch of the new M4 he told evo: “We are looking at eFuel because I think it could be something offered by the petrol industry in the future. eFuel is an additional feature for the challenges we have in the future.”

But it’s industry suppliers such as Bosch that have been the most vocal advocates of the new technology, citing that even with the stringent targets being placed on manufacturers now, a majority of cars on the road in 2030 will still be powered by fossil fuels. Development of cleaner alternatives, like eFuel, will have its own part to play in order to solve at least part of the problem.

While the development of synthetic fuels remains in its infancy and the production process requires large scale investment for what is considered a small volume (Porsche expects to have 130,000 litres ready by 2022), manufacturers and suppliers haven’t given up on the internal combustion engine just yet and are continuing to invest in eFuels.

As well as allowing today’s internal combustion engined cars to significantly reduce their emissions and to offer a sustainable alternative for motorsport (currently Porsche only plans to use its synthetic fuel for its motorsport programmes and at its driving experience centres), synthetic fuels would allow older cars to remain on the road without the need for any modifications to their engines while still benefiting from the same reduction in tailpipe emissions.

With Governments around the world already announcing plans to ban the sale of petrol and diesel engined cars by the end of the decade, you could argue the development of synthetic fuels is a fruitless task. But the industry is wise to every Government’s willingness to make the boldest of u-turns on a whim, and also bright enough to understand that electric vehicles will never be the answer to every mobility need.
 
Clean fuels, renewable fuels, low carbon fuels, eFuel call them what you want, can be carbon neutral and could very well save the ICE in light of the current trend of governments banning ICE car sales in the future.

A few companies are currently producing renewable aviation fuel which is actually used on a commercial scale. It works.

The problem is that current tech makes it much more expensive to produce than petroleum based fuels and I don’t know when that will change.

I’d like to see it done though, because I don’t know if the BEV charging problem will ever be resolved to match the speed and practicality of filling up a gas tank. Plus I’d like to keep my 4runner forever lol
 
Ils parlent de plus en plus d'incorporer ça dans le motorsport dans les prochaines années, ça va peut être augmenter le rythme de progression de cette technologie là
 
Les e-fuels ont tous le même problèmes: ils ne sont pas économiques à produire en grandes quantités.

C'est quand même très cool comme prospect, est pas comme le bio-fuel d'Audi aux algues il y'a quelques années.

Siemens Energy is a co-developer of the “Haru Oni” project (also known as HIF project), and is serving as a systems integrator to cover the entire value chain – from power generation using Siemens Gamesa wind turbines, to producing green hydrogen, to conversion into synthetic fuel. The company’s flexible PEM (PEM = Proton Exchange Membrane) electrolysis is ideally suited for using volatile wind power.

As the fuel’s primary user, Porsche is planning in the first phase to use the eFuels from Chile in beacon projects. These include using eFuels in Porsche’s motorsport fleet, at Porsche Experience Centres and, later, in series production sports cars. The sports car maker will start with an initial investment of roughly 20 million euros.

AME is the primary developer and owner of the HIF (Highly Innovative Fuels) project company. Enel is a co-funder of the plant, with a focus on wind power and electrolysis. ENAP will support the project by providing operating staff and with maintenance and logistics.

Chile, with its excellent climate conditions for wind power and the associated low cost of electricity, has a very high potential in international terms for producing, exporting and locally using green hydrogen. To generate green hydrogen, electrolysers use wind power to dissociate water into its two components: oxygen and hydrogen. In a second step, plans call for filtering CO2 out of the air and then combining it with the green hydrogen to form synthetic methanol. The result is renewable methanol, which can be converted into climate-friendly fuel using an MTG (methanol to gasoline) technology to be licensed and supported by ExxonMobil.

In the pilot phase, around 130,000 litres of eFuels will be produced as early as 2022. In two further phases, capacity will then be increased to about 55 million litres of eFuels a year by 2024, and around 550 million litres of eFuels by 2026. Porsche will be the primary customer for the green fuel. Other partners in the project are the energy firm AME and the petroleum company ENAP, from Chile, and Italian energy company Enel.

https://newsroom.porsche.com/en/2020/company/porsche-siemens-energy-pilot-project-chile-research-development-synthetic-fuels-efuels-23021.html
 
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