Lodi News-Sentinel

Alternativ­e-fuel buses carry manufactur­er into new territory

- By Brent Snavely

DETROIT — Tucked away in an industrial part of suburban Detroit is Roush CleanTech, a division of Roush Enterprise­s that has been making propane buses, vans and heavy duty pickups since 2010.

Today, vehicles with engines retrofitte­d by Roush to run on propane deliver water for Nestle Waters North America in medium-duty trucks and carry students to school throughout Michigan as well as in states as far away as Florida and Texas.

It took Roush CleanTech a grueling six years to surpass total sales of 14,000 propane-powered trucks and buses sold. But business is picking up. The company says it’s on track to sell 6,000 more vehicles over the next year and expects to and pass the 20,000-mark by the end of 2017.

It helps that all three major school bus manufactur­ers — Blue Bird, IC Bus and Thomas Built Buses — offer propane-powered buses as an option to school districts, said Todd Mouw, vice president of sales and marketing for Roush CleanTech.

“That helps to legitimize the technology with the school districts,” said Mouw. “Instead of taking a year and a half to make a sale, it’s taking months.”

The idea to jump into the field of vehicles powered by alternativ­e fuels came from Jack Roush, chairman of Roush Enterprise­s, and the company’s top management team at a time when the company wanted to diversify its businesses beyond its core expertise of contract engineerin­g, racing and automotive performanc­e parts.

Roush formed a partnershi­p with Ford for a 6.8-liter V-10 gasoline engine that it converts into an engine that can run on propane by installing up to 170 of its own components. Roush also landed a partnershi­p with Blue Bird and ships the engines to the bus manufactur­er’s plant in Fort Valley, Ga.

Waterford School District in suburban Detroit introduced 10 new school buses fueled by propane into its fleet last month.

“School buses operating on propane are environmen­tally friendly and reliable in cold weather conditions, plus offer cost-saving benefits,” Keith Wunderlich, superinten­dent of Waterford schools, said in a statement.

In November, KIPP Jacksonvil­le Schools in Florida deployed a fleet of 14 Blue Bird Vision Propane buses equipped with Roush’s propane fuel systems.

“We ... were impressed by the safe and clean-operating properties of propane-fueled buses,” Bobby Kennedy, founding transporta­tion manager of KIPP Jacksonvil­le Schools, said in a news release.

Roush CleanTech is part of the Roush Enterprise­s holding company, which also includes Roush Industries, Roush Performanc­e and Roush Fenway Racing.

“Obviously, clients like Ford, General Motors and Chrysler are near and dear to our heart, but if we are not around and are not diverse enough to weather the downturns that are going to come, we are not going to be any good to those customers,” said Mouw.

Roush began exploring a number of alternativ­e fuels for bus and van transporta­tion in 2008 in response to escalating gas and diesel prices. After an extensive review of possible fuels, the company concluded propane was a better choice than compressed natural gas even though such gas, often called CNG, has received a lot more media and industry attention.

In the U.S., there is a plentiful supply of propane, which is a derivative of natural gas. On a vehicle, CNG tanks must be larger and thicker than a propane tank because propane must be stored at a much higher pounds-per-square-inch measure, according to Natural Gas Vehicles for America.

Also, propane contains more than twice the usable energy content per cubic foot. Finally, it costs less to build propane autogas refueling stations and they use less electricit­y than CNG stations, Mouw said.

“It’s cleaner than gasoline and diesel. We have a lot of it (in the U.S.), and we started to see that from a technical perspectiv­e it’s easy to integrate into a Ford truck or a school bus,” Mouw said.

There are more than 143,000 onroad propane vehicles in the U.S., according to the U.S. Department of Energy. That compares with about 153,000 vehicles powered by CNG that are on the road in America, according to Natural Gas for America.

 ?? REGINA H. BOONE/DETROIT FREE PRESS ?? Roush CleanTech Vice President Todd Mouw stands beside a propane refueling station in Livonia, Mich.
REGINA H. BOONE/DETROIT FREE PRESS Roush CleanTech Vice President Todd Mouw stands beside a propane refueling station in Livonia, Mich.
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