GM And Energy Department Team Up On Jatropha Farming In India

March 31, 2010

General Motors has already invested in ethanol start-ups Coskata and Mascoma. Now it is throwing more effort behind biodiesel.

The formerly bankrupt automaker teamed up with the Department of Energy and will develop two new experimental jatropha farms in India. The five-year partnership will reply on funding from both organizations.

Goal is to find strains of jatropha that will grow on marginal lands in the U.S. and elsewhere

The aim is to identify new strains of the drought-resistant plant that can grow on marginal land in the U.S. and elsewhere to produce significant quantities of oil to convert to biodiesel. The oil comes from the seed of the weed-like plant, which is known for its ability to grow in sandy, gravelly soils. Strains of jatropha for the experiment have been developed through selective breeding and laboratory optimization.

Energy Secretary Steven Chu said he hopes the partnership will speed up efforts to turn jatropha into a commercially viable alternative to petroleum-based fuel. It will cultivate 408 acres of land in three locations, including in Kalol near GM’s India manufacturing plant.

GM has already begun testing jatropha-based biodiesel in its vehicles. The carmaker’s European division has a fleet of six cars running on jatropha blends. The company also used a 10 to 20 percent mixture to run vehicles in India several thousand miles.

GM’s biodiesel work began in India several years ago but on a much smaller scale than its development of ethanol.


Satellite TV For The Car From AT&T And RaySat

January 8, 2009

Telecommunications giant AT&T and RaySat Broadcasting unveiled a satellite television service for cars, trucks and SUVs at the Consumer Electronics Show.

The service, called CruiseCast, delivers 22 channels of news, sports, children and documentary programming in addition to music from networks including Disney, Nickelodeon, Comedy Central and CNBC.

The company’s say an antenna affixed to the vehicle is better at overcoming obstacles that can disrupt a signal, such as an overpass, tunnel or building.

The companies did not release pricing. The service was first discussed in November and is to be available this spring.


Big Jump In Location-Based Mobile Services Seen As GPS Handsets and Portable Computers Hit Market; Cars Seen As Candidates

November 6, 2008
Location-based services seen in cars, too

Location-based services seen in cars, too

More than 82 million subscribers to location-based services are expected by 2013, says research firm ABI Research.

Mobile, location-based social-networking sites will take off as consumer sign up for friend-finder applications, local search and geo-tagging, the firm said Thursday.

Even PC-based social networking sites such as Facebook and MySpace will permit the sharing of real-time experiences. Growth will primarily be driven by the availability of GPS handsets, but also by mobile Internet devices running Intel’s low-power Atom chip.

Location-based services also could be available in cars building upon experimentation now underway in Japan.


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