From September, greener petrol with a 10 per cent bioethanol
mix will become the new standard. Filling stations across the UK will be
switching from E5 petrol to greener E10 unleaded, designed to cut vehicle
emissions. It will likely marginally increase fuel bills – and astronomically
hike running costs for owners of older vehicles who will need to avoid using
it.
That is because models produced as recently as the early
2000s may not be compatible with the new fuel due to its higher bioethanol mix
that can damage components in older vehicles.
Doubling the amount of bioethanol in fuel can cause various
issues in older vehicles, mainly because ethanol is hygroscopic; it absorbs
water from the atmosphere. And that water, in turn, finds its way into your
car. Leading to condensation in fuel tanks, fuel lines and carburettors and
cause corrosion in brass, copper, lead, tin, and zinc components. As ethanol is
also a solvent, it can eat through rubber, plastic, and fibreglass, so hoses
and seals are likely to perish more quickly because of the higher ethanol
concentration in E10.
E5 will be in the form of super unleaded, which is far more
expensive than conventional, lower octane petrol. It is currently priced at
139.6p-a-litre compared to 126.3p for standard petrol, according to average UK
fuel prices at the time of publication.
One way
business owners can reduce costs is by using a fuel card. Before activating the
card, you can specify exactly how you or drivers use it, setting limits on the
cash spent, the number of gallons it can buy, or hours used.
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