http://www.timesleader.net/articles/stories/public/200512/03/046p_news.html
By Jared Nelson | 03 December 2005
A recent move by the Caldwell County school district has
county school bus riders, and bus drivers, breathing easier.
The school district recently switched the fuel for its
fleet of buses from regular diesel fuel to a blend of diesel
and biodiesel, a fuel derived from natural oils —
in this case, soybeans — and school officials say
the cleaner-burning biodiesel is already paying off.
The district used its last supply of regular diesel fuel
at the end of October, said Larry Curling, the district’s
transportation director.
After that, the district converted its fuel supply to a
B20 biodiesel blend (a blend of 80 percent diesel and 20
percent soy oil).
The switch has several benefits, Curling said, citing the
cleaner exhaust and emissions produced by biodiesel fuel
as one of the most important.
Before, when buses lined up in front of the county’s
schools each afternoon, they were separated by only a few
feet. With the bus engines running, students and drivers
were exposed to the fumes and exhaust from the bus in front
of them in the line.
“That exhaust was just running right up in front
of the other bus,” Curling said. “Now, you can’t
even notice it. It just burns clean.”
The cleaner exhaust will be a breath of fresh air for students
in the school system, where asthma is the number one reason
for absenteeism, he said.
“The most important thing is the benefit to our students,
bus drivers and monitors, he said.
Soy-based biodiesel is also the only alternative fuel to
have successfully completed the Environmental Protection
Agency’s health effects testing under the Clean Air
Act, he added.
Its use will also strengthen the U.S. economy and reduce
the nation’s dependence on foreign oil, he said.
“Since U.S. soybeans are plentiful, petroleum prices
are unstable, and oil-producing regions of the world are
volatile, biodiesel is beneficial to our energy security.”
Curling said the district opted to pursue the biodiesel
changeover after some research and conversations with other
school districts and local soybean producers.
Traditionally, biodiesel had been more expensive than regular
diesel fuel, but recent petroleum price increases, coupled
with federal and state incentives to distributors to officer
biodiesel, now make the costs essentially equal.
“Right now, there’s not much price difference,”
he said.
The school district solicits bids from a list of approved
western Kentucky fuel suppliers about once a month. The
last supply delivered came at a cost of $2.10 per gallon,
about 6 cents a gallon cheaper than regular diesel, he said.
“I don’t think anybody is arguing we’re
going to see cheap oil again.”
For the quantity of fuel consumed by school buses each
year, saving pennies on the gallon can mean hundreds of
dollars saved each year.
The district runs 30 buses each day, transporting 1,700
students to and from school. Buses travel about 2,100 miles
a day, and the fuel they burn amounts to approximately 55,000
gallons each year.
Any cost savings involved, though, takes a back seat to
the other benefits of the alternative fuel mixture, Curling
said.
“The bottom line is, we are using soy biodiesel for
the health benefits for all of us, the environment, and
to support America’s soybean farmers.”
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