Model/Engine size: 2.0t
Model/Engine size: 2.0t
Fuel: Flex fuel Petrol/Bioethanol (E85)
Fuel economy combined: 33.2mpg
Saab has recently refreshed the styling of its entire 9-3 range, with a new front end inspired by the Aero X concept car, complete with ’eyebrow lighting’ above the headlights. This makes the iconic Convertible even more appealing, and with the BioPower option, you can even claim that you have a green car - and a sexy one at that. But is it really green, and does it drive as well as it looks?
By introducing BioPower to the entire 9-3 range, Saab became the first manufacturer to offer flex
fuel technology on all of its models in the UK. The decision follows the success of BioPower in the 9-5 range and it brought flex fuel to a convertible for the first time in the UK.
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Flex fuel cars, or BioPower in Saab speak, can use any blend between E0 (0% bioethanol, 100%petrol) and E85 (85% bioethanol, 15% petrol). Bioethanol can achieve life cycle CO2 reductions of between 50% - 70%, but at the moment supply of the fuel is limited. Flex fuel enables drivers to use E85 when it’s available, without being stranded when it isn’t, and is therefore seen as key to building up an E85 refuelling network.
The technology behind flex fuel is tried and tested. In Brazil the market is dominated by flex fuel
whilst in Sweden over 10,000 BioPower Saab 9-5s were sold last year. The same could easily happen here too if there was support for the refuelling infrastructure. Saab is doing its bit by making BioPower as widely available as possible and other manufacturers are following.
BioPower variants cost about £600 more to buy and use about 20% more bioethanol than petrol (E85 costs around 2p per litre less than petrol), but from April 2008 BioPower models will benefit from a 2% reduction in company car tax, and E85 brings performance gains. Power rises by 14% and torque by 13%, knocking over a second off the 0-60 sprint. Saab’s turbo technology is particularly well suited to bioethanol, as it can extract more power from the fuel than a non-turbo engine. And the bioethanol and turbo combination means mid-range acceleration is excellent.
The downsides? There are currently only 15 fuel stations in the UK with bioethanol pumps (all at Morrisons supermarkets). Five are in the South West, five are in East Anglia, and the other five are dotted around the UK. So very few people will be fortunate enough to be able to refuel with bioethanol at the moment.






