2007年VOA标准英语-Indy Racers Go Green(在线收听) |
By Paul Sisco If it works for one, the rest usually follow suit. That's the way it is in motor racing. This year all 33 race cars in the Indianapolis 500 are running on ethanol, not gasoline, not methanol, not natural gas. They will use 100% ethanol, made from corn. Paul Sisco reports. At this year's Indianapolis 500, all 33 cars will be running on high-powered ethanol, made from corn. Indy is going green. Race car driver Jeff Simmons, of Team Ethanol, says "Hey, we should be getting our fuel from the Midwest, not the Middle East." President Bush agrees. "I like the idea that farmers are growing energy that power our cars,” Mr. Bush says. “I'd rather be paying American farmers than people overseas for the energy that fuels this economy." President Bush wants Americans to cut gasoline consumption by 20% over the next decade, and says ethanol will play a big part in that. But many say producing ethanol from corn is inefficient. It takes too much cropland, water and energy. This has an impact on food production and supplies, affecting food prices and U.S. exports. "If we can get the cost of producing ethanol from woodchips, or switchgrass, down to a level where it is competitive with ethanol from corn, then I think we have a chance of making some substantial progress in producing fuel for cars without disrupting the world food economy,” he says. “But short of that, I don't see how we are going to be able to do it." Biofuel crops, like corn, used to produce most of America's ethanol absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere while growing. That offsets the greenhouse gases released when conventional fuel such as gasoline is burned. When ethanol and other biofuels are used instead of petroleum, the amount of carbon released into the atmosphere is reduced even further. Research is underway to make ethanol production more efficient. In the meantime, if the fastest race cars in the world can run on ethanol, it is safe to say more drivers will want their cars to do the same. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2007/3/37851.html |