Methanol vs. Natural Gas Vehicles: A Comparison of Resource Supply, Performance, Emissions, Fuel Storage, Safety, Costs, and Transitions.

881656

10/01/1988

Event
1988 SAE International Fall Fuels and Lubricants Meeting and Exhibition
Authors Abstract
Content
This paper is a comprehensive comparative analysis of methanol, compressed natural gas, and liquefied natural gas as automotive fuels. First, we examine natural gas, coal, and biomass feedstocks, and the “security” of foreign feedstocks. Next, vehicle performance and emissions are considered, followed by an analysis of vehicle refuelling and storage technology. Environmental impacts of fuel production and distribution are analyzed; followed by a review of health, flammability, transport, and end-use hazards. We perform a detailed cost analysis that combines fuel cost and vehicle cost into discounted life-cycle cost-per-mile. Finally, we discuss the feasibility and implications of transitions to methanol and natural gas from our current vehicular fuel system. We find that natural gas vehicles may offer slight economic and environmental advantages, but that a transition to natural gas fuel would be more difficult, at least in the U.S. Neither fuel is a suitable long-term replacement for petroleum.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/881656
Pages
44
Citation
DeLuchi, M., Johnston, R., and Sperling, D., "Methanol vs. Natural Gas Vehicles: A Comparison of Resource Supply, Performance, Emissions, Fuel Storage, Safety, Costs, and Transitions.," SAE Technical Paper 881656, 1988, https://doi.org/10.4271/881656.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Oct 1, 1988
Product Code
881656
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English