Download the PowerPoint presentation version of the playbook.

11
Natural Gas Vehicles Strategic Considerations National Conference of State Legislatures August 11, 2013

Transcript of Download the PowerPoint presentation version of the playbook.

Page 1: Download the PowerPoint presentation version of the playbook.

Natural Gas Vehicles Strategic Considerations

National Conference of State Legislatures

August 11, 2013

Page 2: Download the PowerPoint presentation version of the playbook.

Corporate Overview

Largest Natural Gas Utility Company 7 Local Distribution Utilities in 7 states 4.5 million customers

Tropical Shipping

Page 3: Download the PowerPoint presentation version of the playbook.

Price Stability of CNG

Natural Gas at $2.88/Mcf

Natural Gas (divide by 7.2) $0.40

Transport Costs & Fees $0.20

Electricity Costs per GGE $0.10

Maintenance per GGE $0.20

Federal and State Taxes $0.25

Fuel Card Fees per GGE $0.05

Retailer Profit Margin $0.70

CNG at the Pump $1.90

Natural Gas at $5.76/Mcf

Natural Gas (divide by 7.2) $0.80

Transport Costs & Fees $0.20

Electricity Costs per GGE $0.10

Maintenance per GGE $0.20

Federal and State Taxes $0.25

Fuel Card Fees per GGE $0.05

Retailer Profit Margin $0.70

CNG at the Pump $2.30

The natural gas fuel commodity makes up a smaller portion of the overall price of the delivered fuel when compared to gasoline or diesel.

Page 4: Download the PowerPoint presentation version of the playbook.

The Economics of Vehicle Classes

Type of Vehicle

Incremental Cost *

Annual Use (Gals.)

Annual Savings **

Simple Payback

Honda Civic (consumer) $7,500 500 $750 10 yrs.

Sedan (fleet application) $10,000 1,200 $1,800 6 yrs.

Pickup Truck (fleet app.) $11,000 2,000 $3,000 4 yrs.

Cargo Van $14,000 2,500 $3,750 4 yrs.

Step Van/Box Truck $24,000 4,000 $6,000 4 yrs.

School Bus $28,000 2,600 $3,750 7 yrs.

Garbage Truck $35,000 8,000 $12,000 3 yrs.

Class 8 Truck $65,000 15,000 $22,500 3 yrs.

* Cost assumes no grant money, rebates, tax credits, etc. available

* * Savings calculated based on savings of $1.50/GGE at retail CNG station

Page 5: Download the PowerPoint presentation version of the playbook.

The Light Duty Market Challenge $500,000+ for Centralized Fueling Stations

• 500 down, 160,000 to go - $50+ billion? in investment to match gasoline stations

• The economics work for fleets, so there will continue to be growth

• $100,000?+ to make a private station public accessible

$8,000+ Vehicle Conversion/Replacement Premium • Takes 7 years+ to recover the premium

• Limited vehicle selection from OEM’s, especially vehicles desired by target customers

• Efforts around conversion, and specifically tank technologies, is ongoing

$5,000 Home Refueling Appliance (HRA) product and Installation Cost • An additional 4+ years to recover the HRA cost

• Limited fill capability, maintenance unknown (historically not good)

Result: $8,000 + $5,000 = $13,000 per vehicle premium, or 11+ years payback

MUST REDUCE VEHICLE CONVERSION COSTS & DEVELOP A LESS EXPENSIVE HRA

Page 6: Download the PowerPoint presentation version of the playbook.

The Home Refueling Appliance (HRA) BRC Fuelmaker Phill is the only commercially available HRA

• Expensive price with installation, approximately $6,000 • Limited fill capability, less than a half gallon per hour • Historically has had compressor performance and maintenance issues • AGL is a distributor, and installs and maintains Phill units

AGL Resources is actively engaged with a team of industry leaders in the development of a less costly HRA

• AGLR has joined with EnCana, Questar, SoCal Gas, DTE Energy, and a large Appliance Manufacturer to evaluate options

U.S. Department of Energy - Advanced Research Projects Agency- ENERGY (ARPA-E) – Methane Opportunities for Vehicular Energy (MOVE)

• 13 projects awarded with $30 million in funding – including 4 HRA designs • Engineer Light-Weight Affordable Natural Gas Tanks • Develop Natural Gas Compressors that can efficiently fuel a NGV at home • GTI and GE have projects within this program, and AGL is actively involved

Page 7: Download the PowerPoint presentation version of the playbook.

The LDC and HRA Advantage • Natural gas is priced without a “margin” mark-up, therefore preserving and assuring the price differential for the customer.

• Utilities are buying large quantities of supply, and can achieve economies of scale, efficiency and can hedge in their fuel purchasing.

• Most markets still provide options that allow for direct purchase from marketers, providing customers the opportunity to fix the price of natural gas for a period of time.

• Some Utilities have established rate tariffs that incentivize customers to convert to natural gas vehicles.

• The utility provides a skilled network of field service technicians that can assure safety is maintained as the market grows. • Highly reliable, safe, accurately measured delivery of the natural gas provides a trusted existing and solid foundation for growth.

Page 8: Download the PowerPoint presentation version of the playbook.

AGL’s Experience • In the NGV/CNG business since the 1970’s

• Owns and maintains eight CNG refueling stations on customer premises

for fleet vehicles in Georgia (city/county maintenance vehicles, forklifts, etc.)

• Provide CNG maintenance services to 30+ other commercial customers

who own their own equipment

• Department of 6 full time, 24 hour emergency dispatched, professionally

trained CNG technicians

• Developed the MARTA CNG transit bus program in 1996

• Contracted with Alagasco in 2012 to maintain existing and construct new stations

Page 9: Download the PowerPoint presentation version of the playbook.

AGL Resources Activities Key 2013 Initiative - AGL Resources is in the process of finalizing an enterprise-wide fleet conversion plan, including the associated CNG infrastructure development. Georgia – Atlanta Gas Light

• Investing $11.57 million of USF to support development of publicly accessible CNG stations throughout its service territory in Georgia • 6 contracts have been executed, with construction commencing in 2013 • AGL will be planning, constructing and maintaining these CNG filling stations • USF backed Home Refueling Appliance leasing program has been implemented • Reviewing additional upgrades and installation at AGLC service centers

Page 10: Download the PowerPoint presentation version of the playbook.

AGL Resources Activities Illinois – Nicor Gas

• Favorable government programs support NGV efforts (i.e. $4,000 state rebate). • 17 CNG stations already attached to the distribution system.

Tennessee – Chattanooga Gas

• Established a new tariff for construction of CNG stations for customers. • Discussing a new station in 2014, with possible City of Chattanooga support.

Virginia – Virginia Natural Gas • 3 existing public access CNG stations – station upgrades underway in 2013. • Qualified CNG technician on staff to provide service and maintenance

Florida – Florida City Gas • Filed a new tariff for CNG station construction • Actively engaged in draft legislation providing incentives for vehicle purchases

5 year tax holiday on fuel tax, HRA tax exemption, $6 million a year for 5 years

toward incremental vehicle cost ($250,000 cap per entity/$25,000 per vehicle)

New Jersey – Elizabethtown Gas • Planning a replacement of an existing station with a significant station for ETG fleet usage, as well as local fleet and public access. • Working with the Port of Elizabeth on a number of opportunities requiring station construction and maintenance. • Expecting to file new CNG tariffs in the next 60 days.

Page 11: Download the PowerPoint presentation version of the playbook.

Natural Gas Fueling our Future