
The United States has been sitting (literally) on a massive reserve of fuel that until now may have gone unnoticed.
The 78 foot alternative fuel powered wave-piercing trimaran called Earthrace is finding a new energy source in human fat. The ship’s captain, New Zealander Pete Bethune, underwent underwent liposuction and donated enough to produce 100ml of biofuel, while two other, larger volunteers also had the procedure, making a total of 10 litres of human fat.
All in all, that’s enough fat to help the boat travel about 15km. The remaining mix comes from 100 per cent biodiesel. The Earthrace will attempt this March to circumnavigate the globe in 65 days — breaking the previous record set in 1998 of 75 days.
Obviously, I don’t think we’re going to see Senator Stevens arguing to tap into the more than five million Americans that are considered “morbidly obese” — but it does make you consider the amazing possibilities in terms of fuel alternatives that are all around us. That, and perhaps we should go on a diet before some alien species invades looking for it’s own next generation energy source. We certainly would provide enough “umpf” for lightspeed.
via daily mail


3 Comments
Gross - but who knew that now the fat deposites of lipo clinics could be put to good use.
how can a voyage of 65 DAYS beat a previous record of 75 HOURS? Someone is either bad at writing or at adding…
I was going to come up with something clever to cover that lame-ass mistake (worm-hole) but instead I’ll just own up to the bad writing option.
2 Trackbacks
[...] More detail here in this post from Ecotality. [...]
[...] Si chiama Earthrace ed è totalmente alimentato tramite biodiesel, questo trimarano capace nel 1998 di compiere il giro del mondo via mare in 75 giorni, mettendo a segno il suo record personale. Mentre un equipaggio si prepara a partire il prossimo marzo per tentare di abbassare a 65 giorni il record precedente, è stato condotto un interessante esperimento. (fonte: Ecotality) [...]