Fraunhofer working on optimized methanol reformers to deliver hydrogen
NHTSA finalizes first occupant protection safety standards for automated vehicles without driving controls

Wabtec and BNSF Railway partnering on biodiesel, renewable diesel pilot

Wabtec and BNSF Railway are partnering on a new biofuel project aimed at quantifying the impact of alternative fuels on emissions, durability, and performance in Wabtec locomotives. BNSF and Wabtec will begin testing biofuel in the second quarter of this year.

The two companies will demonstrate the performance of biodiesel (B20) and renewable diesel (R55) in revenue service on Wabtec Tier 3 and Tier 4 Evolution Series locomotives in California. BNSF will operate the locomotives between Barstow and Los Angeles, California.

The rail industry is intently focused on reducing its environmental footprint by exploring emerging technologies. Biofuels provide a unique near-term opportunity to have a significant impact on reducing carbon intensity.

—Bob Bremmer, Group Vice President for Wabtec’s Fleet Innovation and Transformation division

BNSF is pleased to partner with Wabtec to test higher percentage blends of biodiesel and renewable diesel. Rail is already the most carbon-efficient mode of land freight transport, and the use of these lower carbon fuels is another means for BNSF to reduce its emissions and help meet its carbon reduction goal. Wabtec continues to be a good innovation partner for us – last year, we piloted the first battery-electric freight locomotive in North America.

—John Lovenburg, Vice President, Environment & Sustainability

Wabtec already has approved a 5% biodiesel (B5) and 30% renewable diesel (R30) blend for its locomotive engines. There currently are approximately 11,000 Evolutions Series engines in operations today with railroads around the world.

Last year, BNSF conducted a pilot with a battery-electric locomotive developed by Wabtec in commercial service between Barstow and Stockton that showed an 11% reduction in fuel consumption and greenhouse gas emissions compared with standard diesel units operated on the same route. (Earlier post.)

Comments

SJC

When oil is expensive alternatives seem possible

The comments to this entry are closed.