Welcome
Can we grow fuel to power engines, heat homes and businesses? We Can and We Must! If not for ourselves, then for our children.
produces fuel from plants for your use.
TOGETHER WE CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE AND HAVE A GOOD TIME!
HOW?
- 1. Eat at the restaurants that partner with us,
- 2. Convert your engines and heating systems to burn grease, and
- 3. Buy the fuels we produce.
Whether you believe in global warming a little or a lot, and love engines that make things go really fast (we do),or would rather ride a bike (we do that too). It makes sense for all of us to do what we can to use more fuel made from plants.
Interested? Check out our products page use:
- in diesel engines
- in commercial and home heating systems
- as feedstock for biofuels processing
- in wood-brick and pellet production
- as additive for road paving
- as additive in waste incineration
Is there a restaurant/food service provider that ought to use our service? Show them our Partner’s Page?
Does your business serve the food service industry? Would you like them to know you’ve got your green on? Check out our associates in the industry page.
Here’s why we should try to use fuel made from plants:
- Plant-based fuels provide
. Growing fuel above ground means no net gain of carbon dioxide, the main cause of global warming. Extracting fuel from below ground releases otherwise inert carbon dioxide and other pollutants into the atmosphere. - Plant fuels are renewable resources. Harvesting fuel we grow is sustainable and the renewal cycle is quick, often several harvests a year. Fossil fuels take millions of years to become fuel. We can’t grow any more of it and it’s becoming ever-more scarce.
- Only 30% of America’s energy needs are met by resources in North America. Do we need fuel? You bet, but our soldiers need not fight for it in hostile foreign territory! Growing as much as we can will help achieve security at home and still keep our engines running.
- Have you ever seen the devastation left behind from strip mining or a petroleum oil spill? Instead replace that ugly image with waving fields of fuel grain.




























































































