doe’s vehicle technology program 2012 clean cities overview
DESCRIPTION
DOE’s Vehicle Technology Program 2012 Clean Cities Overview. Rita Ebert Coordinator, Greater Long Island Clean Cities Coalition. Clean Cities – 20 Years of Deployment. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
cleancities.energy.gov
DOE’s Vehicle Technology Program2012 Clean Cities Overview
Rita EbertCoordinator, Greater Long Island Clean Cities Coalition
cleancities.energy.gov
Clean Cities advances the energy, economic, and environmental security of the United States by supporting local actions to reduce petroleum use in transportation.
Strong, Established, Staying Power
20 Years in 2013
Clean Cities – 20 Years of Deployment
cleancities.energy.gov
Clean Cities A voluntary, locally-based government/industry partnership
• Established in 1993 in response to the Energy Policy Act 1992
• Companion program to the EPACT mandates requiring certain fleets to acquire AFVs (Federal, State, and Fuel Provider Fleets)
• Long Term Goal: By 2020, 2.5B gal/yr (GGE) of petroleum reduction with alt-fuels and other VT-Deploy initiatives.
Mission: Develop partnerships & support local decisions to adopt vehicle technologies and practices that contribute to
petroleum reduction in the transportation sector. Accelerate widespread usage of advanced technologies.
eere.energy.gov4 | Vehicle Technologies
Clean Cities(leveraging people & resources)
Goals: By 2020, Facilitate 2.5B gal/yr (GGE) of
petroleum reduction with alt-fuels and other VT-Deploy initiatives.
Facilitate electric drive vehicle & infrastructure deployment that supports the “1M EVs by 2015” Presidential goal.
Remove barriers and accelerate deployment of alt-fuel vehicles in support of the President’s “All of the Above” transportation energy strategy.
~100 coalitions serving 78% of the U.S. population
Develop partnerships & support local decisions to adopt vehicle technologies and practices that contribute to petroleum reduction in the transportation sector. Accelerate widespread usage of advanced vehicle technologies
eere.energy.gov
Vice
President highlights National Clean Fleets Partnerships as part of his goal of reducing America's imported oil
Vice President Biden announces $200M for community infrastructure project
President calls out goal of 1 million PHEVs on the road by 2015 in State of the Union address
National Priorities & Clean Cities
US DOE Clean Cities Primary Goal and Results
PRIMARY GOAL:Mass market adoption of alternative fuel and advanced technology vehicles and smarter driving habits
Reduced Petroleum Use in Transportation
Reduced Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Reduced Dependence on Foreign Oil
Improved US Energy, Economic, and Environmental Security
PRIMARY GOAL RESULTS
cleancities.energy.gov
Implement national policies and initiatives by facilitating change on a National and Local basis
Local Coalition Support/Partnership DevelopmentDevelop a Franchise model (designate CC coalitions) so that approach and message are consistent everywhere, but with attention to local market conditions and priorities (provide strategic direction and comprehensive training to franchisees)
National
Local coalition support/partnership development with industry National source of objective information, outreach and educationTechnical tools and experts to address barriers and solve problemsCompetitively awarded financial assistance to jump start markets and incentivize private investment.
Clean Cities Parallel Approach
eere.energy.gov8 | Vehicle Technologies Program
Local Community/Coalition Support and Partnership Development: DOE helps convene key community and business leaders to develop and implement projects, leverage resources, and address local barriers
Public Information, Outreach, and Education: DOE-developed tools help consumers save money on fuel cost and help fleets understand their options for cost-effective alternatives to gasoline and diesel fuel
Technical & Problem Solving Assistance: DOE experts help local leaders address permitting and safety issues, technology shortfalls, and other project implementation barriers
Competitively-Awarded Financial Assistance: Federal cost-share encourages initial private sector match and long-term investment
Deployment Efforts Include Four Major Activities
$
cleancities.energy.gov
Clean Cities Portfolio of Technologies
Repl
ace Reduce
Eliminate
Alternative FuelsElectric Vehicles
Biodiesel Ethanol
HydrogenPropane
Natural Gas
Fuel EconomyMore Fuel efficient vehicles, adopting smarter driving and
vehicle purchasing habits
HybridsLight- and heavy-duty
Electric hybridsPlug-In hybrids
Hydraulic hybrids
Idle ReductionHeavy-Duty Trucks
School & Transit BusesLight-Duty Vehicles
eere.energy.gov10 | Vehicle Technologies Program
What’s Different about Clean Cities ?
~100 coalitions Serving 78% of the US population
Thousands of stakeholders from businesses, city/state governments, transportation industry, community based organizations, utilities and fuel providers
eere.energy.gov11 | Vehicle Technologies Program
• Start Small – work with a limited number of pilot sites (progressive communities with interested public and private sector partners)
• Identify barriers, challenges, and impediments
• Develop best practices and tools, provide technical assistance, and train local champions
• Implement pilot projects, address problems that arise, document experiences
• Refine best practices and tools, share success stories with mass market
• Scale up - Transfer technologies and best practices learned from pilot communities to other locales, and ultimately to mass market. Utilize champions from pilot communities as pace setters, leverage new business development from pilots to stimulate more widespread private sector investment.
Clean Cities National Deployment Strategy
eere.energy.gov12 | Vehicle Technologies Program
3.7 Billion Gallons of Petroleum Reduction since 1993
• Over 560,000 AFVs on the road
• 10,000 alternative fueling stations (CC influenced >70% of them)
• Long term goal of 2.5B gal/year by 2020
Clean Cities Efforts Get Results
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
0.0
500.0
1,000.0
1,500.0
2,000.0
2,500.0
3,000.0
3,500.0
4,000.0
Cumulative Gasoline Gallon Equivalents Displaced
13 cleancities.energy.gov
Top Petroleum Displacement Coalitions
Rank CoalitionTotal GGE Reduced Percent of Total
1 Valley of the Sun (Phoenix) 51,102,612 11%2 Southern California 50,655,698 11%3 San Francisco 28,134,630 6%
4New York City & Lower Hudson Valley 22,405,307 5%
5 Greater Long Island 14,204,029 3% AVERAGE 5,222,137 Median 1,619,151
NOTE: 85 Coalitions Reported Displacement for 2011
THANK YOU FOR REPORTING YOUR FUEL USE/DISPLACEMENT DATA !!!
14 cleancities.energy.gov
CNG Leadership
Rank Coalition Total GGE Saved
Portion of Clean Cities Total CNG
1 Southern California 36,179,134 22%
2 Valley of the Sun (Phoenix) 15,564,513 9%
3 Greater Long Island 11,646,737 7%
Average 2,201,645
Median 259,307
Number of coalitions using CNG 75
15 cleancities.energy.gov
Most Outreach Events
Rank CoalitionOutreach Events Percent of Total
1 Silicon Valley (San Jose) 238 11%
2 Kansas City 98 4%
3 Dallas-Fort Worth 89 4%
4 Twin Cities 85 4%
5 Greater Long Island 69 3% AVERAGE 27
Median 17
eere.energy.gov16 | Vehicle Technologies Program
People Do Business with People
eere.energy.gov17 | Vehicle Technologies Program
Rita EbertCoordinator
Greater Long Island Clean Cities
cleancities.energy.gov
Consumer Education & Outreach: Clean Cities Web Resources
Clean Cities Alt Fuel and Advanced Vehicle Data Center (AFDC)FuelEconomy.gov
cleancities.energy.gov
DOE EERE Information Center and CC Technical Response Service– Website: http://www.eere.energy.gov/afdc/informationcenter.html
– Phone: 1-800-EERE-INF (1-877-337-3463)
– E-mail: [email protected]
– Hours: 9:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. EST
Personalized Technical Assistance
Vehicle Technologies Program eere.energy.gov
Websites and Contact Information
Clean Cities Websitewww.eere.energy.gov/ccities/
Clean Cities Coordinatorswww.eere.energy.gov/cleancities/progs/coordinators.php
Alternative Fuels & Advanced Vehicles Data Centerwww.eere.energy.gov/afdc
DOE EERE Information Center and Technical Response ServiceWebsite: http://www.eere.energy.gov/afdc/informationcenter.htmlPhone: 1-800-EERE-INF (1-877-337-3463)E-mail: [email protected]: 9:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. EST
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act Websitehttp://www.energy.gov/recovery/cleancities.htm
20