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CLEAN CITIES

CLEAN CITIES. Mark S. Smith Vehicle Technology Deployment Mgr. Green Fleet Conference October 19, 2010. Clean Cities – No Longer the Best Kept Secret!. U.S. Department of Energy Mark.Smith@ee.doe.gov. Clean Cities A voluntary, locally-based government/industry partnership.

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CLEAN CITIES

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  1. CLEAN CITIES Mark S. Smith Vehicle Technology Deployment Mgr Green Fleet Conference October 19, 2010 Clean Cities – No Longer the Best Kept Secret! U.S. Department of Energy Mark.Smith@ee.doe.gov

  2. Clean Cities A voluntary, locally-based government/industry partnership Established in 1993 in response to the Energy Policy Act (EPAct) of 1992 Companion program to the EPACT mandates requiring certain fleets to acquire AFVs (Federal, State, and Fuel Provider Fleets) Deployment of alternative fuels and advanced vehicle technologies Funded and managed by DOE-HQ in Washington, DC. DOE Regional Project Management Centers located in Pittsburgh, PA; Morgantown, VA, and Golden, CO guide coalitions and manage projects. Primary Focus – Petroleum Reduction Mission:To advance the energy, economic, and environmental security of the U.S. by supporting local decisions to adopt practices that contribute to the reduction of petroleum use in the transportation sector.

  3. Petroleum Displacement Methods Replace petroleum with alternative fuels and low-level blends. Reduce by promoting energy efficiency in vehicles through advanced technologies and more fuel efficient vehicles. Eliminate by promoting idle reduction, greater use of mass transit, trip elimination, and other congestion mitigation approaches. Reduce Replace Eliminate

  4. Clean Cities Portfolio of Technologies Reduce Replace Eliminate • Alternative Fuels • Biodiesel (B100) • Electricity • Ethanol • Hydrogen • Propane • Natural Gas Hybrids Light- and heavy-duty Hydraulic hybrids Electric hybrids Plug-In hybrids Fuel Economy More Fuel efficient vehicles, adopting smarter driving and vehicle purchasing habits Idle Reduction Heavy-Duty Trucks School & Transit Buses Light-Duty Vehicles

  5. Clean Cities’ Focus Areas Consumer Information, Outreach, and Education: Fuel Economy Guide, Alternative Fuel Data Center (AFDC), other web based consumer tools, targeted workforce and end-user education Local Community & Coalition Support: Direct support for CC activities, public events, training for CC coalitions & key community decision makers, and deployment project coordination Partnership Development: Targeted Industry, End-user, University, and Stakeholder Partnerships Technical & Problem Solving Assistance: Addressing Market Barriers, Safety Issues, Technology shortfalls Financial Assistance: Funding to Facilitate Infrastructure Development and Vehicle Deployment

  6. Clean Cities Today 87 active coalitions in 45 states Coalitions serve 78% of the population 632,000 AFVs using alternative fuels 5,600 AFV stations 6,500+ stakeholders

  7. Clean Cities Gets Results ! • Displaced 2.4 Billion Gallons of Petroleum • > 2.4 billion GGE displaced by coalitions since 1993 • 15 million GGE in 1994, 375 million GGE last year (28% annual growth) • 580,000 new AFVs on the road • Over 6000 alternative fueling stations (CC helped build >70% of them) 7 NREL stock photo Bottom line: > 2 billion GGE displaced, best yet to come

  8. Clean Cities Gets Results ! • Major Increase in Alternative Fuel Transit Buses • 6% alternative fueled in 1997 • 20% in 2007 • Coalitions responsible for > half • Helping to Green National Parks • Air-quality improvements • Visitor education/inspiration • Wildlife preservation • Effective industry partnerships 8 Bottom line: Penetrated key alternative fuel niche markets

  9. Clean Cities Gets Results ! • Turning Garbage into Gas • Deployed biomethane technology from DOE R&D • Successful refuse truck tests • Potential 300 landfills each producing 20,000 gal/day LNG • Created Alternative Fuel Corridors • $35 million for infrastructure since 1998 • Biofuels I-65, OR, NY, PA, MD, VA, DC • Other fuels, e.g., natural gas in CA, UT, NY NREL stock photo 9 Bottom line: Generated alternative fuels and made them accessible

  10. Clean Cities Gets Results ! • Partnered with National Media • Collaboration with PBS-TV • > 50 segments on alt fuels, advanced vehicles, fuel economy • FuelEconomy.gov uses segments • Enhanced CC legitimacy among automotive journalists • Leveraged Funding 25:1 • $43 million from Clean Cities • Matched by $214 million • Resultant partnerships brought in additional $845 million 10 Bottom line: Raised visibility of advanced transportation and energized funding

  11. Budget History(not including $300M funding from ARRA) Clean Cities Budget $ Millions Appropriation

  12. ARRA Clean Cities Recovery Act Awards Geographical Distribution Puget Sound Clean Air Agency $14,999,770 Washington Clean Energy Coalition $14,970,144 Michigan NYSERDA $13,299,101 New York Greater New Haven Clean Cities $13,195,000 Connecticut State of Wisconsin $15,000,000 Wisconsin Kum & Go, LC $1,000,000 Iowa The Treasure Valley Clean Cities $5,519,862 Idaho State of Indiana $10,125,000 Indiana Greater Long Island Clean Cities $14,994,183 New York City of Chicago $14,999,658 Illinois SCAQMD $5,591,611 California Clean Fuels Ohio $11,041,500 Ohio Metropolitan Energy Information Center $14,999,905 Missouri Utah Clean Cities $14,908,648 Utah NJ Clean Cities $14,997,240 New Jersey Kentucky Dept. of Education $12,980,000 Kentucky SCAQMD $9,408,389 California Maryland Energy Administration $5,924,190 Maryland North Central Texas Council of Governments $13,181,171 Texas Triangle J Council of Governments $12,004,175 North Carolina CA DGS $6,917,200 California Virginia Department of Mines, Minerals, and Energy $8,605,100 Virginia Railroad Commission of Texas $12,633,080 Texas Texas State Technical College $12,299,828 Texas San Bernardino Associated Governments $9,950,708 California Center For Clean Transportation $14,983,167 Georgia 12

  13. 2009-2010 Total Awards

  14. Clean Cities Awards will fund … • Over 500 Alternative Fuel Stations (Infrastructure) • 9000 Alternative Fuel and Advanced Technology Vehicles will be deployed • ~ 40 Million gallons/yr of Petroleum Reduction • Hundreds of workshops, educational events, workforce training and public outreach efforts • Local Community & Economic Development, Jobs

  15. 2009-2010 HDV & Infrastructure Awards

  16. Sample of Recovery Act Awards North Central Texas: Dallas: B20, E85, CNG, HEV and EV; fleets include Coca-Cola, Sysco, Frito Lay, school districts, and taxis. South Coast Air Quality Management District’s (SCAQMD) UPS Ontario-Las Vegas: 700-mile LNG fueling corridor along one of the nation’s most heavily traveled routes; 48 new LNG HDVs, supports 161 UPS LNG HDVs (SCAQMD) Natural Gas Drayage Truck Initiative: Replace 180 diesel drayage trucks at the Ports of Los Angeles and LongBeach with LNG trucks Maryland Hybrid Truck Goods Movement Initiative: Largest collaborative HEV truck (150) project in the U.S.; fleets include ARAMARK, Efficiency Enterprises, Nestle Water Company, Sysco, and UPS Clean Energy Coalition’s Michigan Green Fleets Initiative: 271 AFVs and 19 stations (CNG and electric) New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA)’s Statewide AFV and Infrastructure Program: 307 AFV/HEV school buses, and municipal, utility, and urban delivery vehicles and 82 stations Clean Fuels Ohio’s Advanced Transportation Partnership: 283 AFVs for taxi, city, school, and delivery fleets; 15 stations Utah Clean Cities Coalition’s Petroleum Reduction Program: 16 new and 24 upgraded public CNG stations, 678 CNG vehicles; 2 biodiesel stations Texas Railroad Commission’s LPG Pilot Program: 882 LPG vehicles, including 245 school buses, 24 medium-duty trucks and 613 LDVs for 40 school districts and public agencies; 35 stations New Jersey Clean Cities Coalition’s CNG Project: 277 refuse trucks and shuttle buses and 4 new CNG stations For additional information on Clean Cities Recovery Act Awards go to http://www.energy.gov/recovery/cleancities.htm

  17. Clean Cities Coordinators Find your local Clean Cities Coordinator at http://www.afdc.energy.gov/cleancities/progs/coordinators.php

  18. Financial Opportunities All Federal agencies --- (www.Grants.gov) Current Clean Cities Projects: (www1.eere.energy.gov/cleancities/projects.html) Clean Cities Tracker for all $ources: (www1.eere.energy.gov/cleancities/financial_opps.html) DOE Broad Based Vehicle Technology Opportunities: (www.netl.doe.gov/business/solicitations/index.html) Incentives and Laws search engine: (http://www.afdc.energy.gov/afdc/laws/)

  19. Websites and Tools Alternative Fuels and Advanced Vehicles Data Center (AFDC) Access all of the tools and information at http://www.afdc.energy.gov/afdc/info_resources.html

  20. AFDC PREP Tool Under Construction

  21. Clean Cities University Courses of Interest Heavy-Duty Idle Reduction GREET Fleet Footprint Calculator My MPG Tool Alternative Fueling Station Locator TransAtlas Tool Petroleum Reduction Planning Tool Develop your expertise on Clean Cities tools, alternative fuels, and advanced vehicle technologies http://ccu.westnetmlp.com/home

  22. Alternative Fuel Price Report ** Clean Cities Alternative Fuel Price Report - October 2009 Now includes prices for pubic and private stations. ** Recently customized to include additional information

  23. Alternative Fuels Assistance DOE EERE Information Center and Technical Response Service • Website: http://www.eere.energy.gov/afdc/informationcenter.html • Phone: 1-800-EERE-INF (1-877-337-3463) • E-mail: technicalresponse@icfi.com • Hours: 9:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. EST

  24. National Fleet Outreach • The need to strategically engage national fleets to support their use of alternative fuel and advanced technology vehicles to help achieve the 2020 Clean Cities petroleum reduction goal of 2.5 billion gallons • To opportunity to develop a National Partnership that supports the Clean Cites petroleum displacement objective and provide value to the partner fleets, stakeholders, coalitions and DOE DRAFT

  25. Clean Cities Coalitions

  26. National Petroleum Reduction Partnership The National Petroleum Reduction Partnership, a broad-based national initiative, assists fleets in exploring and adopting alternative fuels and advanced vehicle technologies through technical support, effective advocacy and funding incentives. NPRP participants receive solid expertise, insightful case studies and promotional collateral to justify and accelerate their petroleum reduction strategies. DRAFT

  27. National Fleet Partner Goals/Objectives • Coordination with all 87 coalitions via a single point of entry • Unbiased, accurate technical and market resources • Individualized fleet assessments • Access to new and existing Clean Cites tools • Recognition at national and local level • Potential for group purchasing, aggregate vehicle acquisition • Potential for collaboration with DOE and the national labs on R&D efforts DRAFT

  28. National Petroleum Reduction Partner Pledge to reduce petroleum usage on an annual basis • Must have fleet operations in multiple states • Must own or have control, via a contractual relationship over 50% of their fleet • They do not have to currently being using alternative fuels or advanced vehicle technologies but must have the ability to do so. • Actively participate in a minimum of one coalition based on corporate/field location or other strategic location DRAFT

  29. Product Partners These Partners provide products and services that support the Clean Cities portfolio of alternative fuels and advanced technologies. They include: • OEM’s and Dealers • Fuel Providers • Infrastructure Providers • Conversion Companies DRAFT

  30. Association Partner These partners represent industry trade groups and alliances who focus on fleet operations/management and the deployment of alternative fuels, vehicles and advanced technologies. They include: • NAFA • PERC • EDTA • NBB • NGVA • NTEA DRAFT

  31. Next Steps • Complete Membership Packet • Finalize Fleet Partnership Agreement • Recruit “Charter Partners” • Product and Association Partnership

  32. Contact Information & Important Links • Mark S. Smith • Vehicle Technologies Deployment Manager • U.S. Department of Energy (EE-2G) • 1000 Independence Avenue, SW • Washington, D.C. 20585 • Office: (202) 287-5151 • Fax: (202) 586-3000 • E-mail: Mark.Smith@ee.doe.gov • Clean Cities Website:www.cleancities.energy.gov • Clean Cities Coordinators:www.eere.energy.gov/cleancities/progs/coordinators.php • Fuel Economy Guide and Website: www.FuelEconomy.gov • Alternative Fuels & Advanced Vehicles Data Center: www.afdc.energy.gov • DOE National Idling Reduction Network : http://www1.eere.energy.gov/vehiclesandfuels/resources/fcvt_national_idling.html

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