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Widescale Biodiesel Production from Algae
Michael Briggs, University of New Hampshire, Physics Department
(revised August 2004)
As more evidence comes out
daily of the ties between the leaders of petroleum producing countries and
terrorists (not to mention the human rights abuses in their own countries),
the incentive for finding an alternative to petroleum rises higher and
higher. The environmental problems of petroleum have finally been surpassed
by the strategic weakness of being dependent on a fuel that can only be
purchased from tyrants. The economic
strain on our country resulting from the $100-150 billion we spend every
year buying oil from other nations, combined with the occasional need to
use military might to protect and secure oil reserves our economy depends
on just makes matters worse (and using military might for that purpose just
adds to the anti-American sentiment that gives rise to terrorism). Clearly, developing alternatives to oil
should be one of our nation's highest priorities.
In the United States, oil is primarily used for
transportation - roughly two-thirds of all oil use, in fact. So, developing
an alternative means of powering our cars, trucks, and buses would go a
long way towards weaning us, and the world, off of oil. While the so-called "hydrogen
economy" receives a lot of attention in the media, there are several
very serious problems with using hydrogen as an automotive fuel. For automobiles, the best alternative at
present is clearly biodiesel, a fuel that can be used in existing diesel
engines with no changes, and is made from vegetable oils or animal fats
rather than petroleum.
In this paper, I will
first examine the possibilities of producing biodiesel on the scale
necessary to replace all petroleum transportation fuels in the U.S.
I. How much biodiesel?
First, we need to
understand exactly how much biodiesel would be needed to replace all
petroleum transportation fuels. So, we need to start with how much
petroleum is currently used for that purpose. Per the Department of
Energy's statistics, each year the US consumes roughly 60 billion
gallons of petroleum diesel and 120 billion gallons of gasoline. First, we
need to realize that spark-ignition engines that run on gasoline are
generally about 40% less efficient than diesel engines. So, if all
spark-ignition engines are gradually replaced with compression-ignition
(Diesel) engines for running biodiesel, we wouldn't need 120 billion
gallons of biodiesel to replace that 120 billion
gallons of gasoline. To be conservative, we will assume that the average
gasoline engine is 35% less efficient, so we'd need 35% less diesel fuel to
replace that gasoline. That would work out to 78 billion gallons of diesel
fuel. Combine that with the 60 billion gallons of diesel already used, for
a total of 138 billion gallons. Now, biodiesel is about 5-8% less energy
dense than petroleum diesel, but its greater lubricity and more complete
combustion offset that somewhat, leading to an overall fuel efficiency
about 2% less than petroleum diesel. So, we'd need about 2% more than that
138 billion gallons, or 140.8 billion gallons of biodiesel. So, this figure
is based on vehicles equivalent to those in use today, but with
compression-ignition (Diesel) engines running on biodiesel, rather than a
mix of petroleum diesel and gasoline. Combined diesel-electric hybrids in
wide use, as well as fewer people driving large SUVs when they don't need
such a vehicle would of course bring this number down considerably, but for
now we'll just stick with this figure. (note - my
point here is not to claim that conservation is not worthwhile, rather to strictly
look at the issue of replacing our current use of fuel with
biodiesel - to see how achievable that is).
I would like to point out though that a preferable scenario would
include a shift to diesel-electric hybrid vehicles (preferably with the
ability to be recharged and drive purely on electric power for a short
range, perhaps 20-40 miles, to provide the option of zero emissions for
in-city driving), and with far fewer people buying 6-8,000 pound SUVs
merely to commute to work in by themselves.
Those changes could drastically reduce the amount of fuel required
for our automotive transportation, and are technologically feasibly
currently (see for example Chrysler's Dodge Intrepid ESX3, built under
Clinton's PNGV program - a full-size diesel electric hybrid sedan that
averaged 72 mpg in mixed driving 6,
7).
One of the biggest
advantages of biodiesel compared to many other alternative transportation
fuels is that it can be used in existing diesel engines without
modification, and can be blended in at any ratio with petroleum diesel.
This completely eliminates the "chicken-and-egg" dilemma that
other alternatives have, such as hydrogen powered fuel cells. For hydrogen
vehicles, even when (and if) vehicle manufacturers eventually have
production stage vehicles ready (which currently cost around $1 million
each to make), nobody would buy them unless there was already a wide scale
hydrogen fuel production and distribution system in place. But, no
companies would be interested in building that wide scale hydrogen fuel
production and distribution system until a significant number of fuel cell
vehicles are on the road, so that consumers are ready to start using
it. With a single hydrogen fuel pump
costing roughly $1 million, installing just one at each of the 176,000 fuel
stations across the US would cost $176 billion - a cost
that can be completely avoided with liquid biofuels that can use our
current infrastructure.
With biodiesel, since the
same engines can run on conventional petroleum diesel, manufacturers can
comfortably produce diesel vehicles before biodiesel is available on a wide
scale - as some manufacturers already are (the same can be said for
flex-fuel vehicles capable of running on ethanol, gasoline, or any blend of
the two). As biodiesel production continues to ramp up, it can go into the
same fuel distribution infrastructure, just replacing petroleum diesel
either wholly (as B100, or 100% biodiesel), or blended in with diesel. Not only does this
eliminate the chicken-and-egg problem, making biodiesel a much more
feasible alternative than hydrogen, but also eliminates the huge cost of
revamping the nationwide fuel distribution infrastructure.
II. Large scale production
There are two steps that
would need to be taken for producing biodiesel on a large scale - growing
the feedstocks, and processing them into biodiesel. The main issue that is
often contested is whether or not we would be able to grow enough crops to
provide the vegetable oil (feedstock) for producing the amount of biodiesel
that would be required to completely replace petroleum as a transportation
fuel. So, that is the main issue that will be addressed here. The point of this article is not to argue
that this approach is the only one that makes sense, or that we should
ignore other options (there are some other very appealing options as well,
and realistically it makes more sense for a combination of options to be
used). Rather, the point is merely
to look at one option for producing biodiesel, and see if it would be
capable of meeting our needs.
One of the important
concerns about wide-scale development of biodiesel is if it would displace
croplands currently used for food crops.
In the US, roughly 450 million acres of land
is used for growing crops, with the majority of that actually being used
for producing animal feed for the meat industry. Another 580 million acres is used for
grassland pasture and range, according to the USDA's Economic Research
Service. This accounts for nearly
half of the 2.3 billion acres within the US (only 3% of which, or 66 million
acres, is categorized as urban land).
For any biofuel to succeed at replacing a large quantity of
petroleum, the yield of fuel per acre needs to be as high as possible. At heart, biofuels are a form of solar
energy, as plants use photosynthesis to convert solar energy into chemical
energy stored in the form of oils, carbohydrates, proteins, etc.. The more
efficient a particular plant is at converting that solar energy into
chemical energy, the better it is from a biofuels perspective. Among the most photosynthetically
efficient plants are various types of algaes.
The Office of Fuels
Development, a division of the Department of Energy, funded a program from
1978 through 1996 under the National Renewable Energy Laboratory known as
the "Aquatic Species Program". The focus of this program was to
investigate high-oil algaes that could be grown specifically for the
purpose of wide scale biodiesel production1.
The research began as a project looking into using quick-growing algae to
sequester carbon in CO2 emissions from coal power plants. Noticing that some algae have very high
oil content, the project shifted its focus to growing algae for another
purpose - producing biodiesel. Some
species of algae are ideally suited to biodiesel production due to their
high oil content (some well over 50% oil), and extremely fast growth rates.
From the results of the Aquatic Species Program2,
algae farms would let us supply enough biodiesel to completely replace
petroleum as a transportation fuel in the US (as well as its other main use
- home heating oil) - but we first have to solve a few of the problems they
encountered along the way.
NREL's research focused on
the development of algae farms in desert regions, using shallow saltwater
pools for growing the algae. Using
saltwater eliminates the need for desalination, but could lead to problems
as far as salt build-up in bonds.
Building the ponds in deserts also leads to problems of high
evaporation rates. There are
solutions to these problems, but for the purpose of this paper, we will
focus instead on the potential such ponds can promise, ignoring for the
moment the methods of addressing the solvable challenges remaining when the
Aquatic Species Program at NREL ended.
NREL's research showed
that one quad (7.5 billion gallons) of biodiesel could be produced from
200,000 hectares of desert land (200,000 hectares is equivalent to 780
square miles, roughly 500,000 acres), if the remaining challenges are
solved (as they will be, with several research groups and companies working
towards it, including ours at UNH). In the previous section, we found that
to replace all transportation fuels in the US, we would need 140.8 billion
gallons of biodiesel, or roughly 19 quads (one quad is roughly 7.5 billion
gallons of biodiesel). To produce that amount would require a land mass of
almost 15,000 square miles. To put that in perspective, consider that the Sonora desert in the southwestern US comprises
120,000 square miles. Enough biodiesel to replace all petroleum
transportation fuels could be grown in 15,000 square miles, or roughly 12.5
percent of the area of the Sonora desert (note for clarification - I am not
advocating putting 15,000 square miles of algae ponds in the Sonora desert.
This hypothetical example is used strictly for the purpose of showing the
scale of land required). That 15,000
square miles works out to roughly 9.5 million acres - far less than the 450
million acres currently used for crop farming in the US, and the over 500 million acres
used as grazing land for farm animals.
The algae farms would not
all need to be built in the same location, of course (and should not for a
variety of reasons). The case mentioned above of building it all in the Sonora desert is purely a hypothetical
example to illustrate the amount of land required. It would be preferable to spread the
algae production around the country, to lessen the cost and energy used in
transporting the feedstocks. Algae farms could also be constructed to use
waste streams (either human waste or animal waste from animal farms) as a
food source, which would provide a beautiful way of spreading algae
production around the country.
Nutrients can also be extracted from the algae for the production of
a fertilizer high in nitrogen and phosphorous. By using waste streams
(agricultural, farm animal waste, and human sewage) as the nutrient source,
these farms essentially also provide a means of recycling nutrients from
fertilizer to food to waste and back to fertilizer. Extracting the nutrients from algae
provides a far safer and cleaner method of doing this than spreading manure
or wastewater treatment plant "bio-solids" on farmland.
These projected yields of
course depend on a variety of factors, sunlight levels in particular. The
yield in North Dakota, for example, wouldn't be as good
as the yield in California.
Spreading the algae production around the country would result in
more land being required than the projected 9.5 million acres, but the
benefits from distributed production would outweigh the larger land requirement. Further,
these yield estimates are based on what is theoretically achievable - roughly 15,000 gallons per
acre-year. It's important to point out that the DOE's ASP that projected that such yields are
possible, was never able to come close to achieving such yields. Their focus on open ponds was a
primary factor in this, and the research groups that have picked up where the DOE left off are making
substantial gains in the yields compared to the old DOE work - but we still have a ways to go. But,
consider that even if we are only able to sustain an average yield of 5,000 gallons per acre-year in
algae systems spread across the US, the amount of land required would still only be 28.5 million acres -
a mere fraction still of the total farmland area in the US.
III. Cost
In "The Controlled Eutrophication process: Using Microalgae
for CO2 Utilization and Agircultural
Fertilizer Recycling"3,
the authors estimated a cost per hectare of $40,000 for algal ponds. In
their model, the algal ponds would be built around the Salton
Sea (in the Sonora desert) feeding off of the agircultural
waste streams that normally pollute the Salton
Sea with over 10,000 tons of nitrogen and phosphate fertilizers each year.
The estimate is based on fairly large ponds, 8 hectares in size each. To be
conservative (since their estimate is fairly optimistic), we'll arbitrarily
increase the cost per hectare by 100% as a margin of safety. That brings
the cost per hectare to $80,000. Ponds equivalent to their design could be
built around the country, using wastewater streams (human, animal, and
agricultural) as feed sources. We found that at NREL's yield rates, 15,000
square miles (3.85 million hectares) of algae ponds would be needed to
replace all petroleum transportation fuels with biodiesel. At the cost of
$80,000 per hectare, that would work out to roughly $308 billion to build
the farms.
The operating costs
(including power consumption, labor, chemicals, and fixed capital costs
(taxes, maintenance, insurance, depreciation, and return on investment)
worked out to $12,000 per hectare. That would equate to $46.2 billion per
year for all the algae farms, to yield all the oil feedstock necessary for
the entire country. Compare that to the $100-150 billion the US spends each year just on
purchasing crude oil from foreign countries, with all of that money leaving
the US economy.
These costs are based on the
design used by NREL - the simple open-top raceway pond. Various approaches being examined by the
research groups focusing on algae biodiesel range from being the same
general system, to far more complicated systems. As a result, this cost analysis is very
much just a general approximation.
While the work on algae for fuel production done in the 1980s and 1990s focused almost
entirely on the simple open pond approach, most groups now working in this field (including
our collaboration) have shifted to focusing on the use of proprietary photobioreactors. The primary
reason being that most of the problems encountered by prior work (takeover by low oil strains, vulnerability
to temperature fluctuations, high evaporation losses, etc.) are primarily a result of using open ponds.
Going with enclosed photobioreactors can immediately solve the bulk of the problems encountered by
prior research. The obvious drawback though is cost - any photobioreactor design is going to be have a
higher capital cost than a simple, open pond. At this point, a key factor in making algal biodiesel a
commercial reality is the development of photobioreactors that can offer high yields (optimization of
light path, etc.), but be built inexpensively enough to offer a reasonable payback rate (otherwise no
company would be interested in building them). Improving processing technologies, and designing an
integrated system to tie the algae production into other processes (i.e. wastestream treatment, power plant
emissions reduction, etc.), can further improve the economics and payback rate. UNH and our collaborators
are currently focusing on these issues, with the goal of making algal biodiesel a commercial reality.
IV. Other issues
To make biodiesel, you
need not only the vegetable oil, but an alcohol as well (either ethanol or
methanol). The alcohol only constitutes about 10% of the volume of the
biodiesel. Among the most land-efficient and energy-efficient methods of
producing alcohol is from hydrolysis and fermentation of plant
cellulose. In the early days of the
automobile, most vehicles ran on biofuels, with Henry Ford himself being a
big advocate of alcohol produced from industrial hemp (not to be confused
with marijuana). The Department of Energy's "Mustard Project" has
focused on the prospect of growing mustard for the dual purposes of biodiesel
and organic pesticide production. Their process focused on alternating
mustard crops with wheat. One nice effect of this is that the biomass from
the mustard (after harvesting the seed ) could be
used as the cellulose feedstock for producing alcohol for biodiesel
production.
V. Hydrogen?
Hydrogen as a fuel has
received widespread attention in the media of late, particularly ever since
the Bush administration proclaimed that developing a hydrogen economy would
clean our air, and free us of oil dependence. There are many problems with
using hydrogen as a fuel. The first, and most obvious, is that hydrogen gas
is extremely explosive. To store hydrogen at high pressures for as a
transportation fuel, it is essential to have tanks that are constructed of
rust-proof materials, so that as they age they won't rust and spring leaks.
Hydrogen has to be stored at very high pressures to try to make up for its
low energy density. Diesel fuel has an energy density of 1,058 kBtu/cu.ft. Biodiesel has an energy density of 950 kBtu/cu.ft, and hydrogen stored at 3,626 psi (250 times
atmospheric pressure) only has an energy density of 68 kBtu/cu.ft.4 So,
highly pressurized to 250 atmospheres, hydrogen's volumetric energy density
is only 7.2% of that of biodiesel. The result being that with similar
efficiencies of converting that stored chemical energy into motion (as
diesel engines and fuel cells have), a hydrogen vehicle would need a fuel
tank roughly 14 times as large to yield the same driving range as a
biodiesel powered vehicle. To get a
1,000 mile range, a tractor trailer running on diesel needs to store 168
gallons of diesel fuel. When biodiesel's slightly
lower energy density and the greater efficiency of the engine running on
biodiesel are taken into account, it would need roughly 175 gallons of
biodiesel for the same range. But, to run on hydrogen stored at 250
atmospheres, to get the same range would require 2,360 gallons of hydrogen.
Dedicating that much space to fuel storage would drastically reduce how
much cargo trucks could carry. Additionally, the cost of the high pressure,
corrosion resistant storage tanks to carry that much fuel is astronomical.
There are two main options
for producing hydrogen - generating it from water, and extracting it from
other fuels. With each case, the energy efficiency is well below 100% (i.e.
you have to put more energy into separating the hydrogen than the chemical
energy the hydrogen itself has). I
will look at each individually, and then analyze the use of hydrogen as a
fuel in general. Currently, most hydrogen used industrially is extracted
from natural gas through steam reformation. At current usage rates, the United States will deplete its projected natural
gas reserves in 46 years - or deplete the currently proven reserves in
roughly 10 years (we use around 22.5 trillion cubic feet (tcf) a year, and have a little over 200 tcf of proven reserves). If the use of natural gas for
transportation (whether directly, or as hydrogen extracted from natural
gas) increases dramatically, the time it will take before we use up all of
our reserves will decrease correspondingly. One of the primary reasons for
looking for alternatives to petroleum is to decrease our dependence on
foreign fuels. If we spend trillions of dollars converting to using natural
gas, only to use up our own reserves in a decade or two, we would find
ourselves back in the exact same position of being dependent on foreign
sources.
Thus, the focus needs to
be on renewable fuels that we cannot run out of. For hydrogen, it is only
renewable when it is extracted from biomass, or when the hydrogen is
produced by electrolyzing water using renewable energies (wind, solar,
etc.). The option of producing it
from biomass is not particularly enticing.
It can be done through gasification and steam reformation, but with
a disappointingly low thermal efficiency.
The need to compress or liquify (or bind
in another form such as a metal hydride) the hydrogen for transport and
storage further reduces the efficiency, and increases the cost. Biomass can be converted to liquid fuels
more efficiently, yielding a fuel with far higher energy density, and that
can work in existing, affordable vehicles.
So, since biomass derived hydrogen is less appealing than liquid
biofuels, let's consider the option of producing hydrogen through
electrolysis.
VI. Hydrogen electrolyzed from
water
The first way to look at a
potential transportation fuel is to examine the overall energy efficiency
for its production. Ultimately we want to know how much energy you get back
for each unit of energy you put into developing the fuel - or the Energy
Return on Investment (EROI). The higher the EROI, the better.
When discussing hydrogen
as a fuel, people usually take a very simplified approach. When used in a
fuel cell, the only by-product of using hydrogen as a fuel is water.
However, that completely ignores the issue of where the hydrogen came from
in the first place. It is tempting to think that this hydrogen would be
produced by electrolyzing water using renewable energy sources, such as
wind. To see how realistic this approach is, it is important to analyze the
overall energy balance, and henceforth the amount of energy that would need
to be produced for the fuel to be used on a wide scale.
A common dream from the
environmentalist community is having a solar panel on the roof of a home to
electrolyze water, producing hydrogen for a fuel cell vehicle. It's a nice dream, but not particularly
realistic. As a real world example,
consider Honda's facility in California that requires an 8 kW solar array
to produce enough hydrogen to drive one small hydrogen vehicle roughly
7,500 miles per year8,
9,
10. Such an array could power several homes
in California, but is only enough for powering
one small car half the normal driving range in the US.
For an average family with two vehicles that drive an average
distance of 15,000 miles per year, an array of 32 kW would be needed - considerably more
with larger vehicles. A 32 kW array
would cost on the order of $160,000, and could not be installed just on the
rooftop of a single home - it would likely require the south-facing
rooftops of at least 4-8 houses to power the vehicles from one home (and
that's if you live in sunny California - in less sunny regions you'd need
considerably more). The inefficiency
of using electricity to produce and use hydrogen means it makes far more
sense to first use any newly installed solar or wind power as direct
electricity consumption (in houses, businesses, etc.), rather than for
hydrogen vehicles. A home in California could meet all of its electric
needs with perhaps a 2-4 kW array, depending on the household
efficiency. Yet to power their
vehicles it would require a 32 kW array or more. With so few people installing the much
smaller arrays needed to meet their electrical needs, how likely is it that
many would install (or be able to afford to install) a much larger array for
their vehicles?
Why does it require so
large an array? Look at the
efficiency. Electrolysis systems are
around 70% efficient (smaller scale systems are less efficient, large scale
industrial ones are higher - 70% is a rough average). That means that for
each unit of energy you put in, the amount of recoverable energy in the
hydrogen produced is equal to 0.7 units. The hydrogen then needs to be
compressed to high pressures for storage in fuel tanks (due to the low
energy density, hydrogen has to be stored at high pressures so that
vehicles can have a reasonable range). Compressing the hydrogen is roughly
85% efficient, liquefaction considerably lower. I will ignore the cost of transporting
hydrogen, the efficiency of which is far lower than transporting biodiesel. Since it is highly unlikely that clean
solar or wind power would be used for electrolyzing water to make hydrogen
(see the above paragraph), I will assume that it would use coal or natural
gas derived electricity (this could also come from burning biomass). Most such power plants operate with
efficiencies below 40%, but I will use that very favorable figure.
So, the hydrogen fuel can
be produced with an overall efficiency of 23.8% - or an EROI of 0.238.
Current generation fuel cells are 40-60% efficient. Assuming a very
favorable 60% efficiency, that reduces the overall energy return down to
14.28%. That means that for each unit of energy in the form of fuel burned
to make electricity, only 14.28% of it is usable
for powering the electric motor in a fuel cell vehicle. Steam reformation of natural gas is a far
more likely scenario for hydrogen production, as it can be done with
roughly a 66% efficiency. Including compression
(85%) and use in a fuel cell (a very favorable 60%, with 45% being more
likely), the overall efficiency is then 33.6% (or a fossil energy balance
of 0.336). The problem is natural gas is not a renewable resource, and the US could not meet the demand of a
nationwide hydrogen economy fed off natural gas. We would simply be replacing foreign oil
dependence with foreign natural gas dependence. With natural gas being much more
expensive (and inefficient) to transport over long distances, this isn't a
desirable scenario.
The limited range of
hydrogen powered vehicles makes them comparable to electric vehicles in
many ways. The energy efficiency, however, is completely different. While a
hydrogen vehicle would use electricity to electrolyze water to get hydrogen
for fuel, an electric vehicle uses electricity to charge batteries. Battery charging systems are around 90%
efficient, compared to the 70% efficiency for electrolysis. Using the
charged batteries and an electric motor to propel a car has an efficiency in the 90% range, giving electric cars an
overall energy efficiency of around 81% (once the electricity is produced,
so not counting energy losses at that end). By contrast, once the
electricity is produced, the efficiency is only around 32%. As can be seen, if the desire is to use
electricity to power our vehicles, it is far more efficient to do so with
electric cars, rather than hydrogen fuel cell vehicles. Electric vehicles are also far cheaper,
another plus. This is why
diesel-electric hybrids with the ability to be recharged and operate solely
on electric power for a short range are an ideal choice for people who live
in cities, or have short commutes to work.
It allows fairly efficient zero-emissions operation on short
commutes, while the diesel engine running on biodiesel allows zero net
greenhouse gas emissions and practically-zero regulated emissions on longer
trips.
What is the energy
efficiency for producing biodiesel? Based on a report by the US DOE and
USDA entitled "Life Cycle Inventory of Biodiesel and Petroleum Diesel
for Use in an Urban Bus"5,
biodiesel produced from soy has an energy balance of 3.2:1. That means that
for each unit of energy put into growing the soybeans and turning the soy
oil into biodiesel, we get back 3.2 units of energy in the form of
biodiesel. That works out to an energy efficiency of 320% (when only
looking at fossil energy input - input from the sun, for example, is not
included). The reason for the energy efficiency being greater than 100% is
that the growing soybeans turn energy from the sun into chemical energy
(oil). Current generation diesel engines are 43% efficient (HCCI diesel
engines under development, and heavy duty diesel engines have higher
efficiencies approaching 55% (better than fuel cells), but for the moment we'll
just use current car-sized diesel engine technology). That 3.2 energy balance is for biodiesel
made from soybean oil - a rather inefficient crop for the purpose. Other feedstocks such as algaes can yield
substantially higher energy balances, as can using thermochemical
processes for processing wastes into biofuels (such as the thermal
depolymerization process pioneered by Changing World Technologies). Such approaches can yield EROI values
ranging from 5-10, potentially even higher.
The above is a description of the potential algae has to
offer. The current state of the technology is not yet capable of achieving yields as high as theoretically possible,
and the economics need further improvement. The UNH Biodiesel Group and a few other groups across the country are
working on improving the technology for growing algae and processing it into biodiesel.
Due to the lack of government funding for this field of work, UNH and its collaborators are seeking
private partners to finance the continued development of the technology. For more information contact:
Michael Briggs ;
email msbriggs@unh.edu
- http://www.nrel.gov/docs/legosti/fy98/24190.pdf
- http://www.nrel.gov/docs/legosti/fy98/24190.pdf
- http://www.unh.edu/p2/biodiesel/pdf/algae_salton_sea.pdf
- http://www.osti.gov/fcvt/deer2002/eberhardt.pdf
- http://www.nrel.gov/docs/legosti/fy98/24089.pdf
- http://www.autointell.net/nao_companies/daimlerchrysler/dodge/dodge-esx3-01.htm
- http://www.allpar.com/model/intrepid-esx3.html
- http://www.eere.energy.gov/hydrogenandfuelcells/hydrogen/iea/pdfs/honda.pdf
- http://www.caranddriver.com/article.asp?section_id=27&article_id=4217&page_number=1
- http://www.caranddriver.com/article.asp?section_id=27&article_id=4217&page_number=2
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