Another CNG highway is coming

  • Another CNG highway is coming

    IGS is an independent retail supplier of natural gas, and a company with a vision of an energy independent United States. They now plan to build a network of CNG (compressed natural gas) fueling stations along I79 from West Virginia to Pennsylvania. IGS plans to finish this first corridor by the end of 2013, and continue to expand with more stations into the future.

    IGS touts the main advantages of CNG fueling stations as 1) less expensive fuel than gasoline or diesel, and 2) refueling time is about the same as traditional fuels.

    According to the US Department of Energy, there are now 558 CNG fueling stations in the US, excluding private stations. That is the fourth most common alternative fueling station behind electric, propane, and ethanol. But CNG expansion continues to be in the news, with municipalities announcing conversions of their fleets to CNG, announcements of more CNG fueling station networks being built, and auto manufacturers announcing the availability of stock CNG versions of their vehicles. It could be that 2013 becomes the year of CNG, laying the groundwork for a tipping point where we see a rapid increase of CNG vehicles on the road.

    From a fuel price management standpoint, CNG presents another indicator of the overall traditional fuels volume pie shrinking, and the potential opportunity of a whole new fuels market for the taking. Which c-store chains will be the pioneers in this new opportunity, and which will follow?