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Vehicle Technologies Office: Alternative Fuels Research and Deployment

Refuse trucks in Oyster Bay, Long Island, filling up at a natural gas station. These trucks were part of a project supported by the Vehicle Technologies Office through Clean Cities.

Refuse trucks in Oyster Bay, Long Island, filling up at a natural gas station. These trucks were part of a project supported by the Vehicle Technologies Office through Clean Cities.

Alternative fuels increase the number of options available to drivers, which reduces price volatility, supports domestic industries, and increases environmental sustainability. The Vehicle Technologies Office (VTO) supports research and development (R&D) to improve how vehicles can use these fuels in the future, as well as activities to increase their availability today. The DOE’s Alternative Fuels Data Center provides basic information on alternative fuels, including BiodieselEthanolNatural GasPropane, and Hydrogen. It also provides information on stations that sell alternative fuels and tax credits and other incentives for using alternative fuels

The Vehicle Technologies Office's Contribution

VTO’s research considers how to better use fuels in today’s engines as well as how to combine alternative fuel blends with advanced combustion engines to reduce emissions and improve efficiency through the DOE national laboratories’ Co-Optimization of Fuels and Engines project.   

VTO supports activities to:

  • Research biofuels and their effects on combustion: Determine the impact of biofuels’ properties on engines’ efficiency, performance, and emissions. Activities include examining ways to increase alternative fuel vehicles’ fuel economy, investigating the potential effects of upcoming blends, and improving the quality of current and future biofuel blends. 
  • Research natural gas: Support the development of natural gas engines and renewable natural gas projects.
  • Help regulated fleets use alternative fuels: Collaborate with fleets (mainly state and utility fleets) covered under the Energy Policy Act of 1992. Our sister office, the Federal Energy Management Program, works with federal fleets.
  • Test alternative fuel vehicles: Collects on-road and laboratory data to better understand how alternative fuel vehicles function in a variety of conditions.
  • Deploy alternative fuels: Work with nearly 100 local coalitions across the country to help fleets choose which alternative fuels will best meet their needs as well as prepare communities for increasing numbers of alternative fuel vehicles. 
  • Provide tools through the Alternative Fuels Data Center: The Laws and Incentive database, which includes information on state and federal tax credits; the Alternative Fueling Station Locator, which lists more 21,000 public and private stations across all alternative fuels; and the Alternative Fuel and Advanced Vehicle Search to look up light-, medium-, and heavy-duty alternative fuel vehicles.

Partnerships

To accomplish these goals, VTO collaborates with national laboratories, universities, industry, and community partners. 

Research activities in alternative fuels work with:

Activities to increase the use of alternative fuel vehicles are carried out with a variety of partners:

Goals

The research activities in alternative fuels fall under the Fuel and Lubricant Technologies subprogram and are described in the Fuel & Lubricant Technologies Annual Report.

VTO’s major deployment goals for alternative fuels are:

  • EPAct fleets: Have all covered vehicle fleets acquire alternative fuel vehicles or reduce petroleum use equal to purchasing 75 percent of their new vehicles as alternative fuel vehicles
  • Clean Cities: Combined with other petroleum reduction strategies, reduce petroleum use in transportation in the United States by 2.5 billion gallons a year in 2025.