diesel
All posts tagged diesel
Yes, if the government says there’s nothing to worry about then be sure there is! I had an earlier article concerning the AdBlue shortage but here’s another one just in case you missed that one.
‘Australia is facing a potential supply chain crisis if it cannot source the fuel additive ‘AdBlue’ before stock runs out in February 2022.
The world is experiencing an acute shortage of urea (the critical ingredient of AdBlue) after one of the largest producers in China banned global exports in a bid to protect the domestic Chinese fertiliser market.
Urea is used to create diesel exhaust fluid, also known as AdBlue, which is required for most diesel vehicles built after 2015 to run properly. AdBlue is a mix of 32% high-quality urea and 68% de-ionised water which was incorporated to reduce emissions. Use of AdBlue varies of 1 L per 563 – 965 km.
Australia does not manufacture high-quality urea (only low quality, not suitable for AdBlue).
If a vehicle runs out of AdBlue, it will revert to ‘limp mode’. The majority of diesel vehicles on the road in Australia come with a Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR) system which uses AdBlue to convert nitrogen oxides in the fuel to water and nitrogen in an effort to significantly reduce emissions.
The Australian trucking industry, which forms the backbone of the food supply chain, uses hundreds of thousands of litres of AdBlue every week. It is also required for critical agricultural machinery and diesel four-wheel drives.
“As soon as it gets out there that the AdBlue [shortage] isn’t just going to stop all the trucks, it’s also going to stop all the shelves being restocked, their servos being restocked, everyone’s going to go, ‘I really should fill up my tank and fill up my toilet paper. And everything is going to go in a day,” said Lydon Watson, CEO of Don Watson Transport.
“It’s not going to deplete over the course of a couple of weeks, or months. The population will skin it dry in a day.”
While technically possible to disable the SCR system, it is presently illegal to do so and would require politicians to issue a legal clarification.
“The government is aware of the concerns around the supply and availability of AdBlue, and is continuing to monitor the situation while working with industry,” said a spokesperson for the Deputy Prime Minister and Transport Minister Barnaby Joyce.
Truck operators are being encouraged to operate as normal despite industry concerns.
An urgent meeting will take place between industry leaders and the Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Communications on Wednesday.
Older trucks are not at risk, as they do not have ‘environmentally friendly’ efficiency systems attached to their engines and will continue to operate as normal.
Other countries across the world are experiencing similar problems. Both Europe and America face imminent shortages, while South Korean authorities have started rationing their supply to extend it for as long as possible. Officials fear that if they cannot secure more urea soon, the South Korean economy could be brought to a crashing halt.
“There are more than 10 million diesel vehicles in Korea, and we have only three months’ stock of urea at maximum. If the shortage of urea continues longer-term, all production of goods and services can be affected,” said Kim Sei-wan, who is a professor of economics at Ewha Womans University in Seoul.
Urea is not a difficult chemical to produce but South Korea, like many other countries in the world, found it cheaper to import it from China and shut their domestic factories.’https://www.rebelnews.com/australia_faces_supply_chain_crisis_over_diesel_additive_shortage?utm_campaign=rb_12_08_2021&utm_medium=email&utm_source=therebel
‘While political parties and journalists seem fixated on Newspolls and who is going to win the contest next year between two major parties when the bulk of Australia want neither – let’s face it, the polls today tell us 36 percent of voters want the Coalition, it means 64 percent don’t; 38 percent want labor, 62 percent don’t. But all this nonsense prompts the question, who in Canberra has their head around the real issues? Almost everything that grows the economy, on any given day, relies on trucking. Diesel trucks are described as the lifeblood of Australia; almost everything we buy spends some time on the road; yet we’re told trucking networks could grind to a halt within a matter of weeks. There’s a looming shortage of an important chemical used to remove pollution from the exhaust of diesel trucks. It is called AdBlue, which is an anti-pollution additive used in modern diesel vehicles. Simply, without it, trucks can’t start let alone run. But here we go again. The chemical that goes into making AdBlue, urea, is imported from China. That supply has dried up. There appears to be no hidden agenda here. The cost of fertilizer in China has gone up and a large portion of that is urea. Reportedly, China don’t want to export any Urea in order to keep the price of local fertilizer down. So if we can’t come up with a new supply of Urea, and, therefore, AdBlue, we are facing a crisis. The whole country will be impacted. One transport company reportedly has 250 prime movers. They buy their fuel in bulk; they’re out of AdBlue next week. Where is the Morrison government? What happens if stock isn’t delivered to supermarkets? Or tractors can’t harvest? Or hospitals don’t have backup generators? Who is telling us how we increase the manufacture of AdBlue in this country? As I understand it, if we can’t source extra urea to make AdBlue we are literally, not metaphorically, up the creek. And if the supply trickles in, you know what happens when a product is in short supply, the price goes up. How does this then affect everything? The reality is urea is in dangerously low supply around the world. Some bulk users have stock in reserve. China has turned off the tap and serious action is needed urgently to determine an alternative source of urea from overseas; but, then, most countries are in a similar situation to us. How then can it be that South Korea, to name but one country, is facing a similar crisis because this is where all this environmental stuff about carbon dioxide kicks in. In South Korea, there are environmental regulations stipulating that manufacturers use urea or face penalties; but we then learn that last month, South Korea, flew a military oil tanker to Australia to airlift 27,000 litres of urea solution because there was a dire shortage threatening to stall commercial transport and industries in South Korea. Wouldn’t you think that makes us dumb? I note that the Managing director of Shaws Darwin Transport, Allan Thornley, has said today that he had talked to his supplier of AdBlue, “and he’s already canvassed right through Europe and everywhere and can’t find any… we need a joint effort between Federal Government and industry leaders to sit down and figure out what we’re going to do”. But Scott Morrison was at Mount Panorama at the weekend; Anthony Albanese was tying himself in knots trying to make us believe that his climate change policy would create 604,000 new jobs; yet from neither of them is there a syllable about this looming crisis. When do these so-called political leaders, if ever, deal with the things that really matter to Australians? You have to wonder whether they even know this crisis is looming.’https://www.facebook.com/alanjonesaustralia
Well, the radical ANTI-GOD ‘save the earth’ crowd are determined to do away with the

NO PETROL FOR YOU! NEXT!!!
petrol and diesel vehicles at any cost. If they get their way you will be plugging in your vehicle sooner than you might think or want!
‘Transport Minister Barnaby Joyce has quashed the prospect of Australia replicating overseas bans on the sale of new petrol and diesel cars, as the Turnbull government splits on whether to encourage the electric vehicle industry.
Environment and Energy Minister Josh Frydenberg this week strongly backed the
prospects of electric vehicles in Australia against opposition from conservative backbenchers. He told Sky News on Tuesday that critics who ridiculed the technology would “probably be the ones buying them in a decade’s time”.
In an opinion piece for Fairfax Media this month, Mr Frydenberg said Australia should prepare for the electric car revolution that has already swept Europe and will soon hit China. He said France and Britain would end the sale of new diesel and petrol cars by 2040, and Norway and the Netherlands aimed to do so by 2025.
Asked whether Australia would follow suit, a spokeswoman for Infrastructure and Transport Minister Barnaby Joyce on Wednesday said his government had “no plan to ban the sale of new petrol and diesel cars … Australia’s transport policies are modelled on Australia’s needs.” His office declined to elaborate.
Two Liberal backbenchers – Craig Kelly and Tim Wilson – have signalled they will oppose any government subsidies to the electric car industry.
This is despite the International Energy Agency’s 2017 outlook for electric vehicles stating that financial incentives were “essential for reducing the purchase cost and total cost of ownership gap between electric and conventional cars”.
The report said such incentives would encourage sales, leading to a rise in production and technology development that would help lower the cost of electric car components.’ http://www.theland.com.au/story/5185912/joyce-rejects-banning-sale-of-petrol-cars/?src=rss
If electric vehicles are such a good thing why do the manufacturers need tax dollars to

THE FUTURE?!
develop and produce them? Is this campaign really about keeping the air clean or do they just simply hate God!? Genesis 8:22 While the earth remaineth, seedtime and harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and winter, and day and night shall not cease.
