Business Day (Nigeria)

Yutong CNG bus guarantee transporte­rs’ return on investment - Kojo Motors

- John SALAU

With the pump price of diesel hitting the roof and cost of petrol creating dip holes in the balance sheet of transport operators and logistics providers, Kojo Motors, owners of Yutong range of buses, has said that it was providing cost-effective alternativ­es to the motoring public with the planned introducti­on and exhibition of Yutong passenger buses powered by compressed natural gas (CNG) at the ongoing Abuja Motorfair holding inside the Internatio­nal Conference Centre annex, Abuja.

“By simple definition, compressed natural gas (CNG) is a natural gas under pressure that remains clear, odourless and non-corrosive,” the company explained.

Although vehicles can use natural gas as either a liquid or a gas, most vehicles use the gaseous form, compressed to about 218 kg/cm2.

CNG can be used as an alternativ­e to convention­al petrol and diesel fuels.

According to the manufactur­ers of Yutong, the 10 meter CNG inter and intracity compressed natural gas commercial passenger bus is coming into the Nigerian market with numerous advantages. CNG is about 50 percent cheaper than petrol.

The company explained that “Without air conditioni­ng, when the speed is 24km/h, the 100km gas consumptio­n is 41 cubic meters. At 32 kilometers per hour, the gas consumptio­n per 100 kilometers is 31 cubic meters.

“With air conditioni­ng on, gas consumptio­n increases by 10percent. This is experiment­al data, specific gas consumptio­n will be affected by road conditions, congestion, driver’s driving habits and so on; we do not promise gas consumptio­n.”

In December 2020, the Federal Government rolled out its National Gas Expansion Programme (NGEP), which involves the conversion of fuel-powered cars and generators from petrol to gas.

The programme, which is expected to deliver at least one million vehicle conversion­s by the end of 2021 aligns with the government’s plan to make gas the first-choice source for cheaper and cleaner energy.

The need to switch from petrol to gas was necessitat­ed by the deregulati­on of petrol by the government, which has led to increment in the domestic pump prices in recent times.

Recall that the president at the 2021 Africa regional heads of government commonweal­th roundtable chaired by the Prince of Wales, Prince Charles, reminded the world of Nigeria’s plan to replace petrol with CNG.

While reiteratin­g Nigeria’s commitment to a just transmissi­on to net zeroemissi­on, President Buhari who was represente­d by the Vice President, Osinbajo, said: “We also have our Natural Gas Expansion Programme. This is where we are using Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) and Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) in order to replace the use of Premium Motor Spirit (Petrol), and this is going on now, we are actually trying to fit and retrofit existing petrol stations so that the use of cleaner fossil fuels will replace it.”

Furthermor­e, the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) is encouragin­g Nigerians to embrace the use of compressed natural gas (CNG) in their automobile­s as alternativ­e to petrol.

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