A primary source of funding for research on liquid electrofuels for transportation was the Electrofuels Program of the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (
ARPA-E), headed by Eric Toone. ARPA-E, created in 2009 under
President Obama's Secretary of Energy
Steven Chu, is the
Department of Energy's attempt to duplicate the effectiveness of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency,
DARPA. Examples of projects funded under this program include OPX Biotechnologies' biodiesel effort led by Michael Lynch and Derek Lovley's work on
microbial electrosynthesis at the
University of Massachusetts Amherst, which reportedly produced the first liquid electrofuel using
CO2 as the
feedstock. The first Electrofuels Conference, sponsored by the
American Institute of Chemical Engineers was held in
Providence, RI in November 2011. At that conference, Director Eric Toone stated that "Eighteen months into the program, we know it works. We need to know if we can make it matter." Several groups are beyond proof-of-principle, and are working to scale up cost-effectively. Porsche is currently considered to be the leader on these projects with their estimated cost per gallon of efuel at forty-five dollars per gallon. Electrofuels have the potential to be
disruptive if carbon-neutral electrofuels are cheaper than
petroleum fuels, and if chemical feedstocks produced by electrosynthesis are cheaper than those
refined from crude oil. Electrofuels also has significant potential in altering the renewable energy landscape, as electrofuels allows renewables from all sources to be stored conveniently as a liquid fuel and reducing
curtailment. , prompted by the
fracking boom, ARPA-E's focus has moved from electrical feedstocks to natural-gas based feedstocks, and thus away from electrofuels. In 2021,
Audi announced that it was working on
e-diesel and
e-gasoline projects. British company
Zero, which was founded in 2020 by former F1 engineer
Paddy Lowe, has developed a process it terms 'petrosynthesis' to create sustainable fuel and has set up a development plant in Bicester Heritage business centre near
Oxford.
Stellantis (major brands:
Alfa Romeo,
Peugeot,
Opel,
Citroen and
Chrysler) announced in September 2023 that it would approve the use of 28 million vehicles in Europe with Electrofuels. This information came after a lengthy test process in collaboration with Saudi Aramco. 24 engine families installed in Europe since 2014 were tested for exhaust emissions, startability, engine performance, reliability, durability, oil dilution, fuel tank, fuel lines and filters, as well as fuel performance in extreme cold and high temperatures. Stellantis expects to save up to 400 million tonnes of CO2 by 2050. In 2023, a study published by the NATO Energy Security Centre of Excellence, concluded that e-fuels offer one of the most promising decarbonization pathways for military mobility across the land, sea and air domains. == Efficiency ==