Clean Energy opens first LNG station in Florida and signs multi-year fueling agreements
Jan. 24, 2014
Heavy duty truck fleets have begun filling up at the Pontoon Beach, Ill., and Fontana, Calif., stations as the heavy duty trucking segment continues its transition to natural gas across the country.
Clean Energy Fuels Corp. announced the opening of the first liquefied natural gas (LNG) fueling station in Florida, as well as the opening of the company’s America’s Natural Gas Highway stations in Pontoon Beach, Ill., and Fontana, Calif., to fuel heavy duty natural gas trucks. The company also announced select deals in the transit and refuse sectors building on its portfolio of natural gas fuel customers across the country.
Trucking:
Clean Energy Opens the first LNG fueling station in Florida and its Pontoon Beach, Ill,. and Fontana, Calif., stations, all part of America’s Natural Gas Highway.
Clean Energy opens its public-access Jacksonville LNG fueling station, the first in the State, making Jacksonville a key stop in America’s Natural Gas Highway and the LNG gateway to Southern Florida.
Representatives from United Parcel Service (UPS) and Raven Transport, which will be fueling at the Jacksonville station, will be speaking at a grand opening ceremony.
Transit:
Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART) plans to convert entire bus fleet to CNG and signs multi-year agreement with Clean Energy to maintain DART’s four CNG fueling stations.
DART plans to deploy 580 compressed natural gas (CNG) vehicles to support its transportation service for the greater Dallas area. Once fully deployed, these vehicles are forecasted to use approximately seven million gasoline-gallon- equivalents (GGEs) per year.
Clean Energy designed and built the four CNG fueling stations for the DART network in 2012.
Refuse:
Smithtown, N.Y., renews natural gas contract with Clean Energy for seven more years
In 2006, Smithtown became the first community on the East Coast to require all residential refuse and recycling contractors to use natural gas powered trucks. As a result, four private collection contractors operating on behalf of Smithtown and the Town’s own municipal vehicle fleet began fueling with Clean Energy.
The 25 compressed natural gas vehicles serving Smithtown are expected to consume approximately 250,000 GGEs of CNG per year.
An insider’s look at what this means for the alternative fuel industry from Clean Energy’s President and CEO, Andrew J. Littlefair:
We’ve begun the year with important expansions in our nationwide network including the opening of the first LNG station in Florida. Florida has taken several steps to support the adoption of natural gas vehicles and we’re expanding the necessary infrastructure accordingly to support this forward-looking state. Heavy duty truck fleets have also begun filling up at the Pontoon Beach, Ill., and Fontana, Calif., stations as the heavy duty trucking segment continues its transition to natural gas across the country. The New Year also saw longtime customers such as DART and the city of Smithtown sign new fueling contracts with Clean Energy, which is a welcome way to kick off 2014.
Visit www.cleanenergyfuels.com or additional information and photos of all recent announcements.