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Jatropha, an ugly, fast-growing and poisonous weed that has been used as a remedy for constipation, may someday power your car. The plant, resilient to pests and resistant to drought, produces seeds with up to 40 per cent oil content that when crushed can be burned in a diesel car while the residue can be processed into biomass for power plants. Although jatropha has been used for decades by farmers in Africa as a living fence because its smell and taste repel grazing animals, the New York Times reports that jatropha may replace biofuels like ethanol that require large amounts of water, fertilizer, and energy, making their environmental benefits limited. Jatropha requires no pesticides, little water other than rain and no fertilizer beyond the nutrient-rich seed cake left after oil is pressed from its nuts. Poor farmers living close to the equator are planting jatropha on millions of acres spurred on by big oil companies like British Petroleum that are investing in jatropha cultivation.
Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (2)
at 14:26 on September 10th, 2007
Interesting possibility. Do you know of any tests that have been done regarding performance and practicality of Jatropha oil? Obviously BP has some reason to explore this. Hope we hear more about it.
at 19:13 on July 8th, 2009
This is really interesting. I hope that some big corporation study the possibility of using Jatropha oil as an alternative source of biofuel for our cars.