HomeNewsBusinessCan e-fuels put plans to end ICE vehicles on ice?

Can e-fuels put plans to end ICE vehicles on ice?

The latest buzzword in the battle for carbon neutrality might just bring a stay of execution for the internal combustion engine. But are e-fuels truly emission-free?

May 19, 2023 / 19:56 IST
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Despite the proposed sustainability of e-fuels, they will find very limited use in production-ready road cars and will occupy a very small niche.
Despite the proposed sustainability of e-fuels, they will find very limited use in production-ready road cars and will occupy a very small niche.

In a recent development following overtures made by the German automotive industry, the European Union has decided to exempt internal combustion engines (ICEs) from the 2035 ban on fossil-fuel driven vehicles. The caveat? They must run exclusively on e-fuels. So what does this mean for some of Germany’s most storied performance cars and, as a corollary, what does this mean for petrolheads all around the world? Are e-fuels truly carbon-neutral? Can they provide the analogue driving thrills that are unique to fossil-fuel-powered cars?

What are e-fuels?

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E-fuels are essentially fuels produced from renewable sources of energy like solar, wind, etc., or decarbonised electricity. E-fuels, also known as synthetic fuels, can be created using electrolysis, splitting water into hydrogen and oxygen and then mixing hydrogen with carbon dioxide or CO2 to create an e-fuel in liquid form. This can be achieved through the Fischer-Tropsch synthesis. E-petrol, e-methanol, etc., are all examples of synthetic fuels. Hydrogen has to be produced from renewable sources, though, otherwise it defeats the point. But e-fuels do produce CO2 and aren’t entirely carbon-neutral. However, given the fact that they are created by extracting CO2 from the atmosphere, the CO2 production is offset to a large extent.

Much like the fossil fuels we currently use, e-fuels carry the same infrastructural advantages. They can be easily transported, and conventional ICE vehicles can be adapted to use them. According to the eFuel Alliance—a Brussels-based advocacy group for the fuels—the climate neutrality of e-fuels is derived from the fact that they emit only as much CO2 as they extract from the atmosphere during the production process, which uses renewable energy.