Natural Gas Taxi Program
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From the Texas General Land Office and the New York City Department of Transportation.
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Ingredients:
The Texas General Land Office, the New York City Department of Transportation,
Ford Motor Company, and Brooklyn Union.
Utensils:
- Cab drivers/fleet taxi owners
- Natural gas provider
- Automobile manufacturers
- Environmental and health groups
- State and local officials
Seasonings:
- Leadership willing to organize, coordinate, and promote the use of natural gas taxis
- Creation of incentives for taxi owners to retire gasoline fueled vehicles and replace them with cleaner burning natural gas taxis
- Education and outreach to taxi drivers and the general public
- Dedicated involvement of local fuel providers
Servings:
Over 250 dedicated natural gas taxis are now operating in New York City.
Instructions:
- Determine available resources including potential federal congestion mitigation and air quality (CMAQ) funds.
- Involve local fuel providers at the beginning of the process.
- Include individual taxi owners as well as large fleet owners.
- Involve all necessary local and state government officials including state energy officials, environmental agencies, transportation agencies, and taxi commissions.
- Market the environmental benefits to the taxi-riding public.
Hints from the Chef:
Compared to gasoline or diesel vehicles, those powered by natural gas emit
80 percent fewer ozone precursors and over 95 percent fewer particulates.
In addition to being cleaner, compressed natural gas is also 30 to 40 percent
cheaper than gasoline or diesel on a same mileage basis.
![[logo] US EPA](http://www.epa.gov/epafiles/images/logo_epaseal.gif)
