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Wednesday, April 23, 2025

OPINION: Gas Up, Emissions Down: The Future of Transportation

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Lee Zeldin, Secretary of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) | Wikimedia Commons

Lee Zeldin, Secretary of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) | Wikimedia Commons

Natural gas…vehicles?

We talk a lot here about the advantages of natural gas for electricity generation, home heating and powering appliances in our homes like clothes dryers and kitchen stoves. But, one of the area with the most potential to grow the affordable, reliable and clean advantages of natural gas is transportation.

Most people don’t realize that there are already thousands—more than 135,000 to be exact—natural gas vehicles (NGVs) on U.S. roads today. And, there are more than 23 million NGVs in use worldwide. According to the U.S Department of Energy’s Alternative Fuels Data Center, “The advantages of natural gas as a transportation fuel include its domestic availability, widespread distribution infrastructure, and reduced greenhouse gas emissions over conventional gasoline and diesel fuels.”

Many of these vehicles are part of government and private fleets, with natural gas powering vehicles like buses and garbage trucks. Just a few examples of organizations that have already embraced NGVs:

In 2023, Walmart debuted five new tractor trailers with compressed natural gas (CNG) engines built by Cummins.

In 2020, UPS announced it would purchase more than 6,000 natural gas-powered trucks. A year later, they took even greater advantage of the clean and affordable NGVs by committing to buy 250 million gallons of renewable natural gas (RNG) to power their NGVs.

Waste Management has spent at least $2.5 billion building a CNG fleet and another $300 million to build fueling stations around the county. The company even runs some of its trucks on RNG collected from its own landfills.

Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport became North America’s first carbon neutral airport by converting 95% of its fleet—shuttles, trucks, sedans and other equipment vehicles—to natural gas.

The advantages are the greatest for long-haul trucks that can benefit from the lower cost of natural gas to travel their extensive shipping routes.

As the Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport success story shows, if you truly want to go green and clean, natural gas is the answer. Natural gas is already the reason that the U.S. is a world leader in lowering emissions. Increased use of natural gas for electricity generation is the top reason for U.S. power sector emissions reductions over the past 17 years—almost double the impact compared to renewable power generation. With NGVs, we could achieve the same victory in the transportation sector.

In the U.S., transportation is the largest contributor to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions accounting for 28% of the emission produced in 2022. And, 23% of those emissions came from medium- and heavy-duty trucks. But, NGVs cut those emissions exponentially compared to gasoline, diesel and even electric vehicles (when you take into account their full life-cycle of emissions).

According to the U.S Department Of Energy’s Alternative Fuels Data Center, “The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) requires all fuels and vehicle types to meet increasingly lower, near zero, thresholds for tailpipe emissions of air pollutants and particulate matter. One advantage to natural gas vehicles (NGVs) is their ability to meet these stringent standards with less complicated emissions controls.” Take the pollutant nitrogen oxide (Nox) as an example. According to The Transport Project, a group that advocates for more NGV use, NGVs provide the largest and most cost-effective reduction of NOx emissions. “The newest natural gas engines with Near-Zero – or Zero Emissions Equivalent – technology exceed stringent new federal NOx emissions standards.”

We can do better than EVs.

The climate hysteria crowd would have you believe the only environmentally-friendly transportation technology out there is electric. But, much like the failed solar installations that were supposed to revolutionize our electrical grid or supposed climate-destroying effects of importing LNG that weren’t (see our last ATEA for more on that), EVs increasingly seem to be a green pipe dream.

Electric vehicle prices remain out-of-reach for many American families and individuals. The average price of an EV in March was $59,205—nearly $12,000 more than their gas-powered counterparts. And, despite years of promises and government subsidies, the EV charging infrastructure still just isn’t there to make electric practical for drivers around most of the United States. On the commercial side, as The Transport Project puts it: “As battery electric heavy-duty trucks come to market, their per unit cost is often double the natural gas alternative…too prohibitive for most end users. Even more, the cost to build out needed on-site fast charging infrastructure makes full scale battery electric vehicle deployment financially out of reach for most commercial fleets.”

The Empowerment Alliance (TEA) is a 501(c)(4) organization founded in 2019 that advocates for U.S. energy independence, according to EmpoweringAmerica.org. TEA supports using American innovation and free-market principles to ensure affordable, reliable, and clean energy.

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