Sunday, August 31, 2014

Fully sustainable city of the future

Is Abu Dhabi running out of oil???
or they dig the well before becoming thirsty !
We Sri Lankans better hurry up change the energy habits ....






Stay on the Cutting Edge of Green Car Technology! We are committed to offering honest, unbiased reviews.  www.ByeByePetrol.info

Thursday, August 28, 2014

"Addressing the very cause of climate change"

http://www.CarbonNegativeProducts.com/   This is the website of passionate environmentalist Mr.Chaminda Serasinha   &  is developed for information to explain and promote the “Direct Carbon Negative Product Concept”. This concept, ratified after years of research by scientists, promotes the idea of a “Direct” “Product” based approach a step beyond the indirect off set approach. A sequential read from top to bottom on the menus listed will take you through this entire concept. Read more....


fast




Stop
 – Climate Change is because of our            comforts!








Get Ready – Learn how to be comfortable                   yet Climate friendly








Go
 – Start using “Direct Carbon Negative        Products”



Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Client Reviews on EVs

Genuine reviews and feedback of our customers is our strength to move the Eco Friendly, electric vehicle concept forward. Please use the Social Media buttons to share your feedback and comments. Thank you. Stay on the Cutting Edge of Green Car Technology! We are committed to offering honest, unbiased reviews.  www.ByeByePetrol.info

Sunday, August 24, 2014

Why use the Green Car Rating?

1. The Green Car Rating includes all measured air-based emissions – not just CO2.

This allows a realistic comparison between different vehicle and fuel types – for example, while diesel typically has lower tailpipe CO2 emissions than petrol, diesel emissions include higher levels of NOx and particulates.

The emissions assessed are: carbon dioxide (CO2), nitrous oxide (N2O), methane (CH4), carbon monoxide (CO), oxides of nitrogen (NOx), hydrocarbons (HCs), particulates (PM), and sulphur dioxide (SO2).

2. The Green Car Rating includes lifecycle emissions, not just tailpipe emissions.

This enables a fair comparison of all conventional and alternative vehicle types – for example, hybrids offer better fuel economy, but also have higher manufacturing emissions.

It also means that zero-emission vehicles can be fairly assessed – while electric cars have zero tailpipe CO2, the Green Car ratings takes into account the emissions produced by electricity-generation and vehicles manufacture.

3. The Green Car Rating is an impact assessment, not just an emissions inventory.

Rather than just quantify the amount of each of the eight emissions, the Green Car Rating assesses by the environmental impact of the emissions.

Not only does this more accurately account for the impacts and location of different emissions, using the total environmental impact makes a comparison of eight emissions possible.

4. The Green Car Rating provides an easy-to-understand system for consumers.

The Rating is designed to used by non-experts and is therefore expressed as a score out of 100 ranging from 0 for the greenest vehicles to 100+ for the most polluting.

How is the Green Car Rating calculated?

The Green Car Rating is based on an assessment of the environmental impacts associated with a car's use and manufacture. This includes all aspects of producing and using the fuel - the fuel cycle (primary production, extraction, transportation, refining, and vehicle operation), as well as the vehicle's manufacture, assembly and disposal - the vehicle cycle.

The Green Car Rating analysis first quantifies the extent of life cycle air emissions arising from the fuel and vehicle cycles (known as an emissions inventory). The air emissions assessed include the so-called 'regulated emissions' - carbon monoxide (CO), oxides of nitrogen (NOx), non-methane organic gases (NMOG) and particulates (PM) - and sulphur dioxide (SO2). In addition, the three main greenhouse gases associated with road transport are assessed: carbon dioxide (CO2) , nitrous oxide (N2O) and methane (CH4).

The analysis then conducts an emissions impact assessment - as its name suggests, this quantifies the impacts of the emissions rather than just quantifying the amount of emissions produced. The advantage of this approach is that the varying levels of all the emissions assessed can be combined to produce an overall environmental impact - without this approach it is difficult to know how to compare (for example) a car with high CO2 and low NOx, with a second vehicle that has low CO2 and high NOx.

The emissions impact assessment is achieved by the use of an environmental rating tool first developed by the European Cleaner Drive Programme to assess the impacts associated with the fuel cycle. This rating system uses recognised 'external costs' to establish the relative weight to attach to different emissions - the external costs are values expressed in monetary terms that reflect the overall damage to the environment and to human health. The analysis used by Next Green Car extends the Cleaner Drive method to include vehicle cycle (car manufacture and assembly).

Using the Green Car Rating system, the level of environmental impacts are expressed as a score between 0-100 - the lower the score, the less the environmental impact (this reverses the Cleaner Drive scores which were higher for lower emission vehicles).

Input data for the Green Car Rating methodology comes from number of reference sources including: the Vehicle Certification Agency (for vehicle or tailpipe emissions), and several academic papers that estimate the emissions produced during the production of materials used for vehicle manufacture.

What is lifecycle analysis?

The Green Car Rating is based on an assessment of the lifecycle emissions – not just those from the exhaust or 'tailpipe'.
As well as the tailpipe emissions produced during a vehicle's use, lifecycle emissions include 'upstream' pollutants produced during fuel production (including primary production, extraction, transportation, and refining) and vehicle production (manufacture and assembly).

What is the Green Car Rating?

The Green Car Rating assesses a vehicle's environmental impact over its whole lifecycle – including vehicle use, fuel production and vehicle manufacture.
The Rating is designed to be easy-to-use and is expressed as a score out of 100 ranging from 0 for the greenest vehicles to 100+ for the most polluting.
The Green Car Rating was developed by Next Green Car (formerly What Green Car) and is a unique method of assessing the environmental impact of a vehicle.
Green Car Rating for Nissan Leaf is : 26 (0 greenest to 100 most polluting)

Saturday, August 23, 2014

Nissan Leaf official facts & figures

Green Car Rating  - 26 ( 0 greenest to 100 most polluting)
Fuel Economy
Km/L Equivalent (Estimated)
71 Km/L (169MPG)
Metric: 15 kW-h / 100km
Official EV driving range 200Km (124 miles)
Measured on NEDC test cycle
Standard charging time
4hrs (7kW)
Estimate based on manufacturer data.
Vehicle Emissions
Official CO2 emissions 0g/km
(Vehicle tailpipe emissions only)
Emission classification ULEV
Greenhouse gas / air quality -  29/21 (0 Greenest to 100 most polluting)
Key Information
Model Range - Leaf
Variant- Electric Car Visia 80kW Auto
Practicality- 5 door, 5 seats
Engine Size- 80 kW synchronous
Transmission- Not available
Engine Power- 108 HP / 109 PS
Acceleration 0-100km  11.5 seconds
Top Speed- 140 kmph (87 mph)

Has Outlander PHEV completed Asia rally successfully?

A Mitsubishi Outlander plug-in hybrid electric four-wheel drive SUV, entered and managed by the Two & Four Motor Sports rally team supported by Mitsubishi Motors Corporation, successfully completed the FIA-certified Asia Cross Country Rally 2014 in its electric vehicle class.

The team completed the rally in 19 hours 17 minutes and 12 seconds for the total driving distance of 1986km under rough courses, winning the first place in the class and 14th place overall.

The Outlander PHEV, having completed this rally for two years in row proved its Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicle (PHEV) powertrain is durable even under severe road conditions.

Rally Car Overview

The Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV rally car used the competition-modified suspension from last year's race car as well as raised ground clearance with the drive battery placed higher for improved off-road performance. The car's Super All-Wheel Control (S-AWC) integrated vehicle dynamics control system was tuned for competition use to provide better traction.

Other modifications included the fitting of a roll cage and underbody skid plate, the use of lighter engine hood, rear gate and interior parts, and additional sealing and a snorkel for water crossings. Apart from these changes, the car competed using almost the same powertrain and mechanical parts as the standard production model.

Result Breakdown by Race Leg

The Outlander PHEV won its class for the second year in a row. Overall standing by leg:

Prologue Run (August 9): 11th place overall in the Prologue Run time trials from Pattaya, Thailand.

Leg One (August 10): First day of full competition, 13th place overall.

Leg Two (August 11): Battling Thailand's deep ruts and muddy and boggy trails the Outlander PHEV finished 12th overall.

Leg Three (August 12): Race moves from Thailand to Cambodia, towards the Angkor Wat World Heritage site. This leg featured comparatively flatter terrain where the Outlander PHEV could take advantage of the high torque of its electric motors and S-AWC which led to a step up to 11th place overall.

Leg Four (August 13): Progress to 9th place overall in this leg which started from Angkor Wat.

Leg Five (August 14): This gruelling leg was the longest and featured deep ruts. Lack of high ground clearance forced the Outlander PHEV to avoid much of the second half of the course, falling to 15th place overall.

Leg Six (August 15): The last leg starting from Phnom Penh featured a flat high-speed course, finishing 2nd in the leg and recovering to finish 14th overall

Mr. Yasuo Tanaka, Technical Director, said:

“Because the extreme road surface conditions unique to the Asia Cross Country Rally gave us a really hard time when we competed for the first time last year, this year we raised the ground clearance further to improve the car's off-road performance.

“It makes me very happy that the Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV has not only successfully completed the rally under such gruelling conditions for the second year in a row but also placed higher than last year.

“I am also very satisfied and proud that the Outlander PHEV was able to demonstrate so convincingly the reliability and durability of MMC's own plug-in hybrid electric vehicle system as well as the superior capabilities of its Twin Motor 4WD and S-AWC systems.

“The Outlander PHEV's improved all-terrain performance this year means we have been able to collect more valuable data than last. I am looking forward to utilising this in our electric vehicle development.”

Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Living with a Nissan Leaf By Neil Lyndon- Report on the pros and cons


Report on the pros and cons of the Nissan Leaf electric car, one of which we have on long-term test




After five months with our Nissan Leaf long-term test car, here are our thoughts on electric motoring.
PROS:
 Our year's savings on petrol could pay for a holiday. On average, in the past, I have filled one tank a month. Since September, when I started using the Leaf full time, I have filled only one tank – for a long trip in the family bus Peugeot 5008. So the 2p per mile cost of running the Leafelectric car (setting aside purchase cost) will have saved us at least £300.
 I have my own parking space in the heart of our town which is always empty. No matter if it's Saturday morning or the middle of a busy working day, the two spaces for electric cars – with recharging points – which the council has provided at the municipal car park will always be vacant. It's bliss. I don't even have to buy a ticket to park (though you do have to pay for the electricity).
 The Leaf sets you apart (if you like that sort of thing). Never mind your Bentleys and Ferraris: if you go out in a Leaf, you can bet you won't see another. Ours seems to be the only one in daily use in Scotland, where I live. People stop and stare when it glides silently by.
Read more at:   CLICK here

Stay on the Cutting Edge of Green Car Technology! We are committed to offering honest, unbiased reviews.  www.ByeByePetrol.info


BMW i3 - Video






Stay on the Cutting Edge of Green Car Technology! We are committed to offering honest, unbiased reviews.  www.ByeByePetrol.info

Thursday, August 14, 2014

Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV - G Navi

The Outlander Plugin Hybrid Electric Vehicle does 50km/L.  Now that's an amazing fuel saver. 

For more technical details please visit :  http://www.byebyepetrol.info/Outlander_PHEV.html


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BMW i3 in Sri-Lanka

One of the coolest EVs, the BMWi3, now at SPARK  show room No.57 Cotta Rd. Colombo 8.
It's worth the effort to invent such a beautiful solid piece of modern technology like this,  you would feel once you take the driving seat and take off just like a fighter jet except that  there is no sound.

Find out More.......

Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Opinions or scientific FACTS?

Stay on the Cutting Edge of Green Car Technology! We are committed to offering honest, unbiased reviews.  www.ByeByePetrol.info


"We are living in one of the most exciting eras in human history," (VIDEO)





 






Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Electric-Car Batteries: What Happens To Them After Coming Out Of The Car?

This may be actual for Sri-Lanka as well. What do you think?  -

It's one of the recurring questions asked by electric-car skeptics: Yeah, but what about all those battery packs? Won't they just end up in landfills?

We know already that the 12-Volt lead-acid car battery appears to be the most-recycled consumer good in the world--though that's largely for safety reasons, as lead is far more toxic than the materials in lithium-ion batteries.

More recently, hybrid car-makers have had programs to take back and safely dispose of used or damaged high-voltage battery packs for 15 years. Those nickel-metal-hydride cells contain precious metals with a known recycling value.

DON'T MISS: Who Knew? A Car Battery Is the World's Most Recycled Product

But for the much higher-capacity lithium-ion batteries used in electric cars, the answers may be slightly different.

A new report from the Mineta Transportation Institute at San Jose State University in California suggests that 20 years hence, there may be 1.3 million to 6.7 million used battery packs from electric cars.

According to the report, as covered in Recycling International (via ChargedEVs), roughly 85 percent of those could be suitable for "post-vehicle use," with the remaining 15 percent likely damaged beyond repair.

There may not be a business model in recycling them, however: The materials in a lithium-ion battery pack are relatively inexpensive, and even with technological breakthroughs, the report estimates that only 20 percent of the cost of recycling could be recouped by selling the recovered materials.

Instead, the value will lie in secondary uses--depending, of course, on what value the market assigns to a used pack.

The report suggests that while this area is "less well-defined," repurposing the packs for other uses could be economical at a cost of $83 to $114 per kilowatt-hour.

For a 24-kWh used pack out of a Nissan Leaf, then, the value might range from $2,000 to $2,750.

The replacement cost of a new Leaf pack (on which Nissan has said it loses money today) is $5,500, assuming the old pack is turned back to Nissan (and the electric-car maker has its own plans for secondary-use businesses as well).

ALSO SEE: Nissan Leaf $5,500 Battery Replacement Loses Money, Company Admits

One potential application might be bundling a used electric-car battery with photovoltaic solar panels for home use, allowing homeowners not only to generate renewable electricity but to store it.

The average U.S. home uses 32 kWh a day, so a Leaf battery pack that may have 16 kWh of usable capacity left could power the home for a substantial portion of its day.

And forward-looking electric utilities are considering the opportunities to decouple such homes from the grid temporarily during periods of peak demand, reducing the utility's peak load.

One thing is certain, however: As Nissan is already doing, every maker of plug-in electric cars will have a program to take back used or damaged battery packs.

Some of them will see the value in repairing them--replacing defective modules and putting them back into stock as remanufactured parts--while others may set up separate businesses to sell them for secondary uses.

Which means it's only a matter of time until a "black market" emerges.
-Green car reports

The portable Electric Vehicle charger

TWith EVTEC move&charge you recharge your EV in just 30 minutes - very easily on every three-phase current plug.
EVTEC move&charge has been developped as a mobile DC fast charge device following the CHAdeMO-Protocol. move&charge is "the" adaptor between existing infrastructure and your DC fast charge socket on your EV. move&charge can operate on every three-phase plug (CEE 16/32A) without any additional installation costs. 
Obviously the portable 2 KW EV charger is something cooler than the one that we knew before. 

www.ByeByePetrol.info 

Soon it will be 10 minutes to charge your Electric car ;)

The time it takes an electric car to fully recharge from empty has always been the technology’s Achilles heel, with even a so-called rapid-charge taking half an hour for a car. So Nissan has  Developed  10-Minute Rapid Charger For Leaf Electric Car.
As most consumers will tell you, they think electric cars should refuel as quickly as gasoline ones.
But that goal might soon be in sight thanks to a joint project between Kansai University in Japan and Nissan’s own team of electric car engineers. Between them, the team has managed to develop charging hardware a new type of battery system which reduces the time it takes to rapid charge a car like the 2012 Nissan Leaf from 30 minutes to just 10 minutes.
By replacing the battery with capacitors and changing the electrode material inside capacitors from carbon to tungsten oxide and vanadium oxide, the engineers discovered the power circuits inside the car could the charger could handle more power, increasing the amount of power that could be safely fed into the car’s battery pack. In other words, the advance isn't in battery technology, it's in charging technology. , allowing the car to charge more quickly than a conventional battery could.
But anyway,  this charger to be used commercially, it's going to take some  time.
So at the moment we should be happy to have the  30 minutes charger, a fter all, that’s not much slower than the time it takes you to visit the restroom, buy a "Maly banis" and and a cup of nice plain  tea  and have a chat , now is it? :))

Monday, August 11, 2014

Outlander PHEV

Energy Efficient Motoring
With its official ADR fuel economy rating of 1.9L/100km*, and unbelievable cruising range thanks to its new developed plug-in hybrid system, the Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV is set to redefine perceptions of electric hybrid cars in Australia.

* Based on the official ADR 81/02 test cycle.

Read more http://byebyepetrol.info/THE-PLUG-IN-EV-HYBRID-SYSTEM.html

The Sri Lankan young engineer Nilanga Seneviratne who invented his own Electric Vehicle



Nilanga meeting president





EV users Sri-Lanka 
www.ByeByePetrol.info

Sunday, August 10, 2014

It's true– there really are a wide variety of vehicles available today that can lower your greenhouse gas emissions, and save you money on fuel. So go ahead--Drive Green. Save Green.





Let's support green alternatives to petroleum in Sri Lanka


EV users Sri-Lanka 

www.ByeByePetrol.info

Living with an Electric Vehicle - 3



EV users Sri-Lanka 

www.ByeByePetrol.info

Living with an Electric Vehicle - 2




EV users Sri-Lanka 

www.ByeByePetrol.info

Living with an Electric Vehicle - Video 1

Living with an Electric Car, presented by Robert Llewellyn of Red Dwarf and Scrapheap Challenge fame, answers your questions about electric vehicles. The three clips explore how they could fit into your lifestyle, what are they are like to drive and use every day.


EV users Sri-Lanka 

www.ByeByePetrol.info