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Greasy Rider
Greasy Rider: Two Dudes, One Fry-Oil-Powered Car, and a Cross-Country Search for a Greener Future | Greg Melville
5 posts | 1 read | 2 to read
Is it possible to drive coast-to-coast without stopping at a single gas pump? Journalist Greg Melville is determined to try. With his college buddy Iggy riding shotgun, this green-thinking guy—who's in love with the idea of free fuel—sets out on an enlightening road trip. The quest: to be the first people to drive cross-country in a french-fry car. Will they make it from Vermont to California in a beat-up 1985 Mercedes diesel station wagon powered on vegetable oil collected from restaurant grease Dumpsters along the way? More important, can two guys survive 192 consecutive hours together? Their expedition on and off the road includes visits to the solar-powered Google headquarters; the National Ethanol Council; the wind turbines of southwestern Minnesota; the National Renewable Energy Lab; a visit to one of the first houses to receive platinum certification for leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED); an "eco-friendly" Wal-Mart; and the world's largest geothermal heating system. Part adventure and part investigation of what we're doing (or not doing) to preserve the planet, Greasy Rider is upbeat, funny, and full of surprising information about sustainable measures that are within our reach.
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keithmalek
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Lcsmcat Have you read this one? It‘s not just about vegetable oil fuel, but parts are, and it‘s hilariously funny. 1y
keithmalek @Lcsmcat Yes, I did. I found it mildly funny. Not quite hilarious. 1y
15 likes2 comments
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keithmalek
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keithmalek
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Birds and windmills (Continued).

SamAnne With wind turbines on the ocean, it‘s also all the under water infrastructure, dredging, development that destroys critical marine habitat, fishing grounds. It is not so benign, and I pray that the proposed project off the Oregon coast is stopped. 1y
keithmalek @SamAnne He only mentions land windmills. 1y
SamAnne @keithmalek I‘m pretty the one Kennedy is fighting is offshore. It‘s been in the news again recently. I think the other factor is large companies wanting to control energy production. Definitely see that on the solar energy front. 1y
6 likes3 comments
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keithmalek
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Birds and windmills (1 of 2)

jedy94 Great humanitarian work by Greg Melville. Thank you, Keithmalek. 1y
SamAnne All the fishing associations are opposed too. It is a more complex issue than this author is letting on, or realizing. 1y
4 likes2 comments
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keithmalek
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