The City of Madison, Wisconsin, will retrofit 20 fleet service vehicles to run nearly 100% on biodiesel fuel with funding from the Wisconsin Soybean Marketing Board (WSMB) and the National Biodiesel Board. Economic and environmental benefits of this investment will include reduced carbon emissions, cleaner air and water, and an expanded market for Wisconsin soybean farmers whose soybeans are a key ingredient of biodiesel fuel, according to the groups.
Biodiesel is a renewable, cleaner-burning diesel-fuel replacement made from a variety of resources such as recycled cooking oil, soybean oil, and animal fats. It can be used in all diesel engines in blends from B-5 (5% biodiesel blended with 95% low-sulfur diesel) all the way up to 100% (B-100). The 20 Madison vehicles will be retrofitted with technology that starts their engines using standard diesel and automatically switches to B-100 fuel when the engines reach a certain temperature.












