F5.5G Leap-forward Development of Broadband in Africa The Africa Broadband Forum 2024 (BBAF 2024) was successfully held in Cape Town, South Africa recently, under…
London’s red buses to run on coffee waste
London’s iconic red buses will soon assimilate into the lives of Londoners by running, at least partially, on coffee.
On Monday this week, a company called Bio-bean teamed up with oil giant Shell to introduce a small amount of oil extracted from coffee waste into the diesel and biofuel mixture already used by the buses.
The company will produce 6000 litres of fuel a year — less than 0.01% of the London buses’ total use in 2015. But the city’s authorities want to increase the number of buses fueled by a blend of diesel and biofuels.
It’s looking at using cooking oil waste, tallow (a form of beef and mutton fat), and — with Bio-bean — coffee waste.
“[Coffee’s] got a high oil content, 20 percent oil by weight in the waste coffee grounds, so it’s a really great thing to make biodiesel out of,” Arthur Kay, founder of Bio-bean told Independent.
How is the company sourcing this waste? By working with thousands of coffee shops across the UK to collect waste grounds — though no number has been released on how much fuel the transporting of these grounds will use.
It seems unlikely that Bio-bean will make its way to Cape Town. Not only is the city promising all-electric buses by 2025, but Bio-bean is currently only looking to expand to areas near instant coffee factories.
Nestle has but one South African coffee factory in a town two hours outside of Durban.
Feature image: David Holt via Flickr (CC BY-SA 2.0, resized)