
Biofuels
Henry Ford as a role model
This pioneer in the auto industry was a hemp farmer. He built many early vehicles out of hemp, so what we are proposing to do is nothing new. By the way, not only were his cars made of hemp fibre, but they ran on Hempoline!
Kestrel Hemp Car on Facebook
Imagine growing agricultural products not only for biofuel, but even for building the Safricars!

The Swiss are already making hemp batteries!Scientists JUST DISCOVERED NEW Hemp Batteries Better Than Graphene And Diamond!
Why Diesel?
Diesel engines are built for compression and thus tend to be more rugged than petrol engines. One aspect of this initiative is to promote the use of biofuels and the diesel engine block is the optimal choice for that. Especially when it is aspirating hydrogen-rich air on the go.
Biodiesel in Germany
Most big “rigs (18-wheelers) on Germany’s highways run on “biodiesel”. This fuel mixes diesel and canola or rapeseed oil.
Ethanol in Brazil
Forty percent of cars in Brazil run on this fuel made from sugar cane. It is not an oil it is alcohol-based. But it goes to show that whole economies can be transformed by homegrown fuels. This has reached a scale that is having a reverse effect on agriculture – as land that used to produce food in now producing fuel. To some people’s way of thinking, this is a negative backwash effect of Biofuels.
Farm Autonomy
Imagine commercial farms growing fields of sunflowers or peanuts, to put though an oil press, to dilute imported (and expensive) diesel and petrol with a homegrown “additive”. Just as these farms have been racing to install solar panels to become less reliant on “the grid”, they can get their tractors and trucks running on “on-board hydrogen” first, as a stepping stone to mixing their own biofuel on the farm.
