Alternative fuel is non-conventional or advanced fuels. Any materials or substances that can be used as fuels, other than conventional fuels. Conventional fuels include: fossil fuels (petroleum (oil), coal, propane, and natural gas), as well as nuclear materials such as uranium and thorium, as well as artificial radioisotope fuels that are made in nuclear reactors, and store their energy.

Some well-known alternative fuels include biodiesel, bioalcohol (methanol, ethanol, butanol), chemically stored electricity (batteries and fuel cells), hydrogen, non-fossil methane, non-fossil natural gas, vegetable oil, and other biomass sources.

There are many different products currently in development at our company.  There are bacterium that have been shown and tested to have a bi-product of ethanol (ethane gas).  In development we are attempting to convert the ethane gas into something usable.  Biomass is an example of the design that we are working on.  Using plant waste and compost to produce the ethanol that can be turned into a usable energy source.

The automobiles that we currently drive already take up to 10% ethanol.  The modifications that would need to be made to the automobiles would not be very costly.  These mods are being developed to then implement on a broad scale along with the fuel that is being developed.