Fact File: Claims higher ethanol fuel blends damage cars exaggerated, expert says
When the United States allowed the widespread sale of gasoline with increased ethanol content at the pumps as a temporary measure to relieve soaring prices, online posts claimed the blend of ethanol and gasoline known as E15 damages engines and offers poor fuel economy. In Canada, gasoline is required to contain a certain amount of renewable fuels such as ethanol, with the amount varying by province. E15, which contains 15 per cent ethanol, isn’t widely available in Canada. But an expert says the blend is not damaging to vehicles produced after 2001 and claims about poor fuel efficiency lack context.
THE CLAIM
As Iran continues to block tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz — a key oil and gas shipping route that has been essentially cut off after the United States and Israel attacked Iran in February — drivers around the world are seeing higher prices at the pumps.
The price surge price led the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on March 25 to temporarily allow countrywide sales of gasoline blended with 15 per cent ethanol. But that decision sparked several online claims by Canadians and Americans about the addition of E15 fuel to gas pumps and its effect on vehicles.


