Refuel: San Diego Regional Alternative Fuel Coordinating Council. Kick-off Meeting October 16, 2014

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Transcription:

Refuel: San Diego Regional Alternative Fuel Coordinating Council Kick-off Meeting October 16, 2014

Item 3 California Energy Commission Grant Requirements

Why are we here? Energy Commission Grant 2 year award $360,040 Continue & expand efforts under REVI Further deployment of AFV and AFI Help region achieve energy and climate goals

Who we are Refuel Partners: SANDAG: San Diego Association of Governments SDRCCC: San Diego Regional Clean Cities Coalition SDCAPCD: San Diego County Air Pollution Control District

Item 4 Introduction to Refuel: San Diego Regional Alternative Fuel Coordinating Council

Refuel: Introduction San Diego Regional Alternative Fuel Coordinating Council Diverse stakeholders Local and regional government Public agencies Utility Education and research institutions Industry Regional Fuel Vehicle

Refuel: Project Overview Assess the current state of alternative fuels in the region Identify alternative fuel training, infrastructure, policy, and funding gaps Create sector-specific toolkits to provide resources to key stakeholders in alternative fuel readiness Address the identified needs and challenges in the San Diego Regional Alternative Fuel Readiness Plan

Refuel: Alternative Fuels Alternative Fuels Overview Electricity Hydrogen Gaseous Fuels Biofuels

Electricity and Hydrogen Electricity Hydrogen Vehicle types Plug-in hybrid electric Battery electric Vehicles use energy stored in a battery and must be charged externally (i.e. plugged-in). Majority of vehicles are light-duty. FCVs turn hydrogen and oxygen into electricity to power an electric motor. H 2 is stored onboard vehicle in high pressure tanks. H 2 is produced by reformation or electrolysis. Currently limited infrastructure and vehicle models.

Gaseous Fuels Natural Gas Propane Mixture of hydrocarbons, primarily methane. Stored onboard vehicles in either a compressed gaseous or liquefied state. Natural gas vehicles are available in sedans to heavy-duty vehicles. Produced from natural gas processing and crude oil refining. Stored onboard vehicles as a liquid at moderate pressure. Commonly available propane vehicles: light and medium-duty trucks, vans, and shuttle buses.

Biofuels Ethanol Biodiesel Domestically produced alcohol-based fuel. Derived from various plant materials including corn, sugar cane, and grasses. Flexible fuel vehicles can operate interchangeably on gasoline and E85. Manufactured from vegetable oils, animal fats or recycled restaurant greases. Biodiesel blends range from B5 to B99. Unmodified diesel engines can run on any biodiesel blend.

Potential Alternative Fuel Fleet Applications Fleet Application 1 Biodiesel Electricity Ethanol (E85) Hydrogen Natural Gas Propane Passenger Vehicle B5 PHEV, BEV FFV FCV CNG LPG Vanpool Shuttle B20 PHEV FFV CNG LPG Pickup Truck B20 PHEV FFV CNG LPG School Bus B20 CNG LPG Sweeper B20 CNG, LNG Other Medium Duty B20 BEV, HEV CNG, LNG LPG Refuse Hauler B20 HEV CNG, LNG Transit Bus B20 BEV, HEV CNG, LNG Regional/Long Haul Truck B20 CNG, LNG Forklift BEV FCV CNG LPG Lawn/Landscape mower B20 LPG Low speed Vehicle 3 NEV LPG

Previous Alternative Fuel Planning Efforts

Deliverables Refuel: Deliverables Alternative Fuel Coordinating Council Alternative Fuel Assessment Sector Specific Alternative Fuel Toolkits Regional Alternative Fuel Readiness Plan

Refuel: Timeline Quarterly meetings Readiness Assessment Survey Existing Conditions Report Alternative Fuels Assessment Toolkits Sector-specific toolkits Outreach and distribution Regional Alternative Fuel Readiness Plan

Refuel: Quarterly Meeting Schedule 1. October 16, 2014 Kick-off 2. January 15, 2015 3. April 16, 2015 4. July 16, 2015 5. October 15, 2015

Electric Gaseous Fuels Natural Gas Propane Biofuels Biodiesel Ethanol Other Hydrogen Refuel: Subcommittee Timeline-ish

Refuel: Subcommittee Meeting Schedule Electric: 2014: November 2015: February, May & August Gaseous Fuels 2014: December 2015: February, March & June Hydrogen 2014: December 2015: March & June Biofuels 2015: January, April & July

Item 5 Refuel Member Responsibilities

Item 6 Refuel Formation Documents

Mission Statement To support innovative partnerships and to facilitate and develop a San Diego regional alternative fuel (AF) readiness plan that identifies, reduces or resolves barriers to the widespread deployment of AF infrastructure and vehicles; thereby showcasing the San Diego region as a national leader in AF readiness.

Goals 1. To establish a regional alternative fuel (AF) coordinating council to help streamline practices and address barriers to AF adoption as well as provide realtime learning and sharing across jurisdictions and to diverse stakeholders involved in AF readiness. 2. To provide input toward a regionallyaccepted comprehensive AF Readiness Plan that leverages past planning efforts, addresses barriers and complexities, and lays the framework for future AF planning efforts.

Goals 3. To provide consistent messages across jurisdictions, agencies, dealerships, consumers, companies, educational institutions, fuel providers, and others about AFs. 4. To leverage and foster partnerships among government, business, academia, and other organizations to promote AF deployment and support economic development in the region.

Charter 1. Purpose 2. Responsibilities 3. Membership Voting members Local government membership Advisory members 4. Meeting time and location

Refuel: Contact Information Anna Lowe, SANDAG anna.lowe@sandag.org (619) 595-5603 www.sandag.org/refuel Kevin Wood, SDRCCC kevin.wood@energycenter.org (858) 5244-7295 www.sdcleancities.org

San Diego Regional Alternative Fuel Infrastructure

Electric Charging DC Fast

Electric Charging Level 2

Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) Site Type All Residence All Residence All Business All Business HD Business HD Business Range Length (miles) % of Sites Covered 2.5 17% 5 47% 2.5 28% 5 57% 2.5 24% 5 48%

Propane (LPG) Site Type Range Length (miles) % of Sites Covered All Residence All Residence All Business All Business LD Business LD Business MD Business MD Business 2.5 32% 5 66% 2.5 45% 5 77% 2.5 46% 5 78% 2.5 43% 5 75%

Ethanol Site Type Range Length (miles) % of Sites Covered All Residence All Residence 2.5 19% 5 48% All Business 2.5 24% All Business 5 50% LD Business 2.5 26% LD Business 5 51%

Biodiesel Site Type Range Length (miles) % of Sites Covered All Residence All Residence All Business All Business HD Business HD Business 2.5 11% 5 29% 2.5 13% 5 35% 2.5 11% 5 28%

Gasoline

San Diego Regional Barriers to Alternative Fuel Deployment

Alternative Fuel Infrastructure Alternative Fuel Vehicles Education and Training