Remove Alternative Fuels Remove Conversion Remove Oklahoma Remove Range
article thumbnail

DOE to award $11M to 20 new Clean Cities projects for alt fuel cars and trucks

Green Car Congress

The US Department of Energy (DOE) is [link] about $11 million to 20 new projects to help states and local governments to develop the infrastructure, training, and regional planning needed to help meet the demand for alternative fuel cars and trucks, including vehicles that run on natural gas, electricity, and propane. Clean Fuels Ohio.

Clean 308
article thumbnail

DOE and USDA Select Projects for More Than $24M in Biomass Research and Development Grants

Green Car Congress

Selected projects are aimed at increasing the availability of alternative fuels and biobased products that are produced from a diverse group of renewable sources of biomass. Funding is provided through USDA’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) and DOE’s Biomass Program. USDA Awards. DOE Awards. Exelus, Inc.

Grant 199
article thumbnail

State Department releases final environmental impact statement on Keystone XL Pipeline Project; analysis of GHG emissions

Green Car Congress

This range is equivalent to annual greenhouse gas emissions from the combustion of fuels in 588,000 to 4,061,000 passenger vehicles. There would also be a delivery point at Cushing, Oklahoma. Synthetic crude oil, similar to conventional crude oil, is created by upgrading bitumen (conversion into lighter hydrocarbons).

Oil-Sands 253
article thumbnail

How Many EV Charging Stations Will $10 Billion Buy for America?

EV Adoption

I have yet to hear how these costs might be allocated toward the different types of fueling infrastructure, but my best guess is that perhaps $5 billion of the $7.5 For example, labor costs in states like California or Hawaii, may be much higher than in Alabama or Oklahoma. billion may go to EV charging infrastructure.

Buy 126