I just want to know when all the restaurant fryer grease and turkey and
chicken guts and feathers will be fueling our cars instead of polluting
waterways.  What are the economics of those guts-to-gas conversion plants?

On 2/2/06, David Brodbeck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Mitch Haley wrote:
> > You seem to think that the price of bio stays constant while the price
> > of dino goes up. Three years ago, bio was $1.70 while dino was $1.40,
> > both fully taxed. One might have thought demand for bio would go through
> > the roof when dino hit $2.50, but it's not happening.
> >
>
> Because biodiesel and petrodiesel are more or less fungible, I doubt the
> price of biodiesel will ever fall below that of petrodiesel.  It's like
> anything else -- it will sell for as much as the market will bear.
>
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