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Opinion: A non-fossil fuel vision needs to recognise there is a world outside the M25

FG head of machinery and farm technology discusses the future energy mix for different industrial applications

Toby Whatley
Head of Machinery and 51AVÊÓÆµTechnology
clock • 2 min read
Opinion: A non-fossil fuel vision needs to recognise there is a world outside the M25

Renewable and alternative fuels have moved well beyond the buzzword stage and, for some, have become part of a culture war focused on who is right and who is supposedly a Luddite fearful of change.

It is all rather dull and often seems to avoid some key technical realities about how vehicle propulsion works and what is actually appropriate for different applications.

READ NOW: Isuzu D-Max EV: 3.5t towing, 1t payload and a true diesel alternative?

Within an urban environment and on the streets of Westminster, all-electric drive for passenger cars and light delivery vans seems entirely sensible. Short journeys, relatively low speeds and numerous locations to recharge battery systems make it application-appropriate, with environmental and social benefits through improved air quality. Excellent stuff.

Industry applications

But applying the same vision to long-distance heavy haulage, remote construction, agriculture and rural industries highlights just how little technical understanding many policymakers appear to have about what these vehicles need to function and just how much energy they consume.

A 250hp tractor working for 10 hours will consume a little over 1,860kWh of energy, which in battery terms would require a battery weighing around 10-12 tonnes alone.

READ NOW: Fendt shows its first full-size all-electric tractor

Apart from the cost, the impracticality of a battery weighing roughly the same as the tractor itself should be fairly obvious.

The solution is an energy mix, and that requires some grown-up discussions about what will work best for different tasks.

Future energy mix

For more than 150 years, we have been remarkably successful at exploding liquified dead dinosaurs to provide power for everything from the smallest lawnmower to the largest container ship. As we move away from this, policymakers need to understand that a future energy mix will likely include electric, biogas, HVO, ammonia and hydrogen, alongside technologies we have not recognised yet.

READ NOW: Hydrogen fuel - Farming without fossils?

There was once effectively a one-fuel solution for almost every task. Replacing that with a ‘different energy source for different applications' approach is far more complicated and nowhere near as simple as pretending every problem can be solved with a battery.

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