Today's rising gas prices haven't just impacted our ability to drive to and from work economically. Yes, gas prices are over three dollars a gallon these days, but it's not just we as individual drivers who are affected. In fact, rising gas prices have impacted everything from consumer goods prices to food prices, to just about anything we buy. They have significantly impacted our economy in a negative way.
In fact, rising gas prices affect everything about our economy. Food prices, consumer goods just about everything has gone up. It's a sad fact that rising gas prices have negatively impacted the economy as a whole.
There is perhaps a "positive" benefit to rising gas prices, though. That is that we have had to think about alternative fuels where we have not had to before. In fact, we've mindlessly relied on fossil fuels over the past generations, but have only given the briefest of glances to renewable energy sources or other alternative energy sources such as water fuel and biodiesel.
Today, we have no choice but to look at these alternative fuel sources. They're within our attention now simply because we must pay attention to them.
Both biodiesel fuels and water fuel provide renewable and environmentally friendly energy sources for us to power our cars with; these energy sources are available today and can have a significantly positive impact on both our pocketbooks and the environment.
Biodiesel fuels utilize plant sources such as corn to produce oil. The oil is then burned as a fuel source. Biodiesel can also re-use used cooking oils such as those discarded by restaurants; this is a great way to keep more waste out of landfills. Biodiesel fuels are completely renewable energy sources and can burn somewhat cleaner than fossil fuels can, so that they can be a much better alternative to fossil fuels such as gasoline to fuel cars with.
We can also use water fuel to make fossil fuel resources go further. With water fuel, some gas is also used, but the technology lets consumers get many more miles per gallon of gas than could be had without it.
With water fuel, mileage per gallon of gas roughly doubles versus that of gasoline alone. You install the conversion kit in your car and the electric current from a battery "burns" water so that you are presented with a very efficient fuel source. This technology has been available for quite some time, but it's becoming more popular now because customers need to get more out of each gallon of gas they use.
There are a couple of drawbacks to biodiesel fuel at present. Although biodiesel is renewable, it produces some pollution. In addition, there is some question about its usefulness as a renewable energy source because it has been suggested that more fossil fuel is used during biodiesel production than is actually saved by using biodiesel instead of gas. Because of this, water fuel may be a better renewable fuel source than biodiesel.
However, water conversion kits may not be available in every area, which would make biodiesel a fine alternative instead. This is especially true if your biodiesel would come from used cooking oils. And as technology gets better, biodiesel will likely become a much more efficient fuel source because it will no longer be manufactured by using fossil fuels. Instead, biodiesel will be produced by using alternative fuels instead.
Regardless of the concerns such as those addressed above, our indiscriminate reliance on fossil fuels is over. We can no longer treat them as though they are renewable sources available to us in endless supply. It's true that rising gas prices are inconvenient and a hardship, but they also make us pay attention to the fact that we simply must change our behavior.
Water fuels and biodiesel fuels are two fuel sources that can help us both save money and the environment.