RNG: Trucks or stations? Which comes first?

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On a special episode of Truck Tech, host Alan Adler spoke with Derek Turbide, vice president of business development at Clean Energy, and Scott Edelbach, executive vice president at Opal Fuels, about the advantages of public and private fueling stations.

For potential buyers of natural gas-powered commercial vehicles, an important topic is understanding the ecosystem and infrastructure surrounding the fuel source.

Clean Energy Fuels’ multi decade push for public station expansion

Clean Energy Fuels, North America’s largest provider of renewable natural gas for the transportation market, focuses on upstream renewable natural gas fuel development from RNG digesters at dairy farms, landfills and wastewater treatment plants that harvest methane that would otherwise be released into the environment. The harvested gasses are cleaned and put into a pipeline for allocation to any of Clean Energy’s stations. Turbide notes that the company has been building out its network of natural gas stations for nearly 30 years.

The development of the X15N platform, which integrates a Cummins engine block with a natural gas header, is expanding opportunities for Clean Energy. Turbide believes that the longer range and capabilities of the 15-liter natural gas engine will allow for a faster rate of station expansion to meet the new demand. He predicts about a 10% increase in stations each year.

With the rise in natural gas fleet adoption by public and private fleets, there is an increase in the need for locations where RNG trucks can fuel. Clean Energy operates approximately 200 tractor-trailer-friendly stations across North America, strategically located along major trucking corridors. Turbide added, “We don’t have one on every corner but we’re growing that network, and it’s the old chicken and the egg. These are multimillion-dollar investments [that] we’re putting in these stations. We want to make sure that we’ve got customers to fuel at those stations, and it only takes around 20 or so trucks to get a new station going.”

On the net-zero front, the ability of RNG to produce a lower or even negative carbon intensity score is an added benefit for fleets looking to reduce overall emissions. For instance, on a dairy farm capturing methane emissions, the cleaned and processed natural gas can be used to offset the emissions generated by the farm’s operations.

RNG market penetration is also key, with nearly 100% of natural gas in California being renewable and around 80% of natural gas coming from renewable sources nationwide. The goal is to increase production to handle the added demand from the larger 15-liter engines on the market. “If we can surpass that billion-gallon mark as an industry and a half a billion-gallon mark as Clean Energy, we’re on the right road,” said Turbide.