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Rail News: Passenger Rail
11/16/2010
Rail News: Passenger Rail
Amtrak's biodiesel locomotive makes TIME's 'best invention of 2010' list
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What do Apple Inc.’s iPad, improved 3-D glasses and Amtrak’s new biodiesel locomotive have in common? All three made TIME magazine’s list of the “50 Best Inventions of 2010.”
In April, Amtrak and the Oklahoma Department of Transportation launched a one-year test of a biodiesel-fueled locomotive on the Heartland Flyer route, which operates between Oklahoma City and Fort Worth, Texas. The GE Transportation P32-8 locomotive uses a biodiesel blend known as B20, which contains 20 percent biofuel and 80 percent diesel. In previously conducted stationary locomotive testing, the fuel reduced hydrocarbon and carbon monoxide emissions by 10 percent each, particulate emissions by 15 percent and sulfate emissions by 20 percent.
At the end of the test period, Amtrak will take detailed measurements on the locomotive to determine the impact of the biodiesel on valves and gaskets. The railroad also will collect locomotive emissions data for analysis in accordance with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s federal test protocols.
The test is being funded through a $274,000 Federal Railroad Administration grant.
In April, Amtrak and the Oklahoma Department of Transportation launched a one-year test of a biodiesel-fueled locomotive on the Heartland Flyer route, which operates between Oklahoma City and Fort Worth, Texas. The GE Transportation P32-8 locomotive uses a biodiesel blend known as B20, which contains 20 percent biofuel and 80 percent diesel. In previously conducted stationary locomotive testing, the fuel reduced hydrocarbon and carbon monoxide emissions by 10 percent each, particulate emissions by 15 percent and sulfate emissions by 20 percent.
At the end of the test period, Amtrak will take detailed measurements on the locomotive to determine the impact of the biodiesel on valves and gaskets. The railroad also will collect locomotive emissions data for analysis in accordance with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s federal test protocols.
The test is being funded through a $274,000 Federal Railroad Administration grant.