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GIVE DIESEL A FAIR CHANGE
Tailpipe emissions from Compressed Natural Gas (CNG)-powered vehicles may be relatively clean and you may live longer surrounded by vehicles that run on it. But if CNG doesn’t kill you, waiting in those endless queues to get this new clean fuel, probably would.
CNG not practical alternative
Modern diesels gaining popularity in Europe thanks to improved refinement, power and lower emissions.

Directives from the Supreme Court have forced CNG down the engines of buses, taxis and autorickshaws in Delhi but there just isn’t enough of the gas to go around. And that’s the snag. The severe supply shortage, insufficient outlets and safety issues highlighted by dubious retro-fitters has put CNG under a cloud. It’s becoming increasingly clear that CNG is not a practical alternative to conventional fuel. Firstly, CNG outlets are still far and few between and it will be years before the fuel is as easily available as petrol or diesel. The volumetric efficiency of CNG is poor, much lower than that of a liquid fuel which means you have to carry more of it for a given range. This is why all CNG-powered cars have to cart around huge cylinders which at best can give 200km between fill-ups. Besides, these geyser-sized cylinders when fitted into a small car fill the entire boot, leaving not much space for even a toothbrush. Performance is also compromised and a gas-powered vehicle just doesn’t drive as well as a car that runs on petrol or diesel.

From a long term perspective, CNG, LPG, or for that matter any fossil fuel, are not the fuel of the future. Car makers are spending billions of dollars on developing fuel cells to power electric cars. This new energy source is an environmentalist’s dream as cars powered by it drip drinkable water as the only byproduct. The huge resources global giants are putting into fuel cell technology will ensure that one day cars powered by them eventually become a showroom reality. But that day will take time. Perhaps even 15-20 years.

In the interim, the trend is moving towards diesel-powered cars, especially in Europe. In India, the D-word is a dirty one in the eyes of environment regulators and the courts. The reasons are understandable. The vast majority of old diesel vehicles roaming our streets are a menace to human health, spewing smoke and particulates that you could literally chew. The worn-out engines of most of this ageing diesel fleet and the bad fuel they use is the reason for their filthy exhaust.

The fact is that diesel hasn’t been given a fair chance in India. Not many people know how clean diesel engines can be until you’ve spent time in Europe. There the latest diesel engines are the antithesis of India’s pollution-belching monsters. Diesel technology is so advanced in Europe that the latest engines can honestly be called ‘clean’ and their emissions are comparable to CNG engines. European car companies have invested heavily in refining diesel engines and they are so good that you don’t hear, see or smell them. Don’t believe it? Hail a taxi in Frankfurt.

So if diesel engines can be so clean, why can’t we have them? There are two issues both of which are inter-linked. Firstly, you need the latest in diesel technology which would add considerable cost to the vehicles and to make it all work you need the cleanest diesel fuel in the world which has next to no sulphur content. Impossible? All you need to do is look back a little more than two years to see what’s changed on petrol engines. With the introduction of Bharat Stage II norms, four-valve heads, multi-point-fuel injection and eight to 32-bit microprocessors, once deemed as costly exotica, are now standard fare. Even the Maruti 800 has this technology! The lesson here is that if industry is forced to apply its resources, it can get the results.

Providing ultra-clean diesel is more of a challenge but is not impossible. We import regular diesel anyway so there’s no problem to import Ultra Low Sulphur Diesel (ULSD). The tricky part is that ULSD cannot be contaminated nor adulterated if it is to work wonders in high-tech diesel engines. What is needed is strict monitoring of ULSD filling stations to ensure that the fuel remains pure when it enters the fuel tank. Besides, wouldn’t all this be cheaper than setting up a CNG infrastructure?

The truth is that the diesel engine is the most efficient internal combustion engine in the world, more so than a CNG or LPG-powered one and there is no good reason to try and keep it out of the consumer’s hands.

Hormazd Sorabjee Source October 2001

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