Automotive

World’s First Whiskey Powered Car Tested In Scotland

By Aanavandi

July 23, 2017

World’s First Whiskey Powered Car Tested In Scotland

Biofuel company Celtic Renewables successfully tested the first car to run on fuel created from whiskey residue, according to a July press release.

The fuel, biobutanol, can serve as a direct replacement for petrol and diesel, meaning that gas and diesel engines do not need to be modified in order to use it. It’s made from two byproducts of whiskey: draff and pot ale.

“It is fitting to do this historic drive in Scotland, which is famous not just for its world-renowned whisky but also for being a powerhouse for renewable energy,” Celtic Renewables founder and president Martin Tangney said in the press release.

“Celtic Renewables is playing its part in sustainability by taking this initiative from a research project at Edinburgh Napier University to, what we believe will be, a multi-billion-pound global business with the opportunity to turn transport green.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J_hsDZ97pJQ

Around 750,000 pounds of draff and 2 billion liters of pot ale are produced by Scotland’s whiskey industry every year. The byproducts created by the production are useless to the whiskey, the BBC reports.

Celtic Renewables received a government grant to build a factory for biobutanol that is expected to be operational in 2019.

Tangney believes that whiskey biofuel is a $150 million industry in Scotland alone. He plans to target other whiskey producing countries, such as the United States and Japan, in the future.