Prince Charles’ car uses fuel made from wine and cheese to protect the environment, the Guardian reported.
The British heir to the throne boasted that his “Aston Martin” was running with “surplus English white wine and whey from the cheese-making process”. He announced this on the eve of the annual UN climate conference, which will begin on October 31 in the Scottish city of Glasgow.
Prince Charles’ bizarre decision to decarbonise his Aston Martin using a mixture of bioethanol made from cheese and wine waste should not be seen as a serious way to tackle the problem, said Greg Archer, director of Britain’s European division. a T&E organization fighting for clean air.
The car, which Prince Charles has owned for five decades, has actually been converted to run on a fuel mixture of 85% bioethanol and 15% unleaded petrol, the Guardian said.