ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- Alaska Waste opened the state's first commercial biodiesel plant Thursday, as part of a green initiative to turn waste into a source of fuel.
Alaska Waste currently collects 4,000 gallons of used cooking oil each week from local businesses. The new plant will turn that oil into diesel fuel for the company's fleet of 100 garbage trucks.
(The success of the biodiesel fuel industry relies heavily on biodiesel testing <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s32Ke2VzrqU>, not only at the production level but at the consumer level, where degraded fuel may cause engine failures. Of major concern to diesel and biodiesel users is the very real possibility that water has contaminated their fuel. (See http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0YcczdvPyAk). The potential catastrophic impact of this problem is discussed at length in this video at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-lh4qhXc_5s&feature=youtube_gdata.
Fleet Fuel's family of inexpensive biodiesel test kits is just a click away on the internet at:
<http://fleetbiodiesel.com/biodiesel_testing_and_supplies.html>)