The document summarizes the annual stakeholder meeting of Wisconsin Clean Cities. It discusses key stakeholders in alternative fuels including local governments, utilities, fuel providers, fleets, and non-profits. Current projects of the coalition include a clean transportation program funded by ARRA, natural gas roundtables, and an electric vehicle task force. Accomplishments from the past year include increases in reported stakeholders and petroleum displacement due to new leadership and membership growth. The meeting served to approve the coalition's bylaws, 2014 work plan and budget.
Lorrie Lisek & Erika Noble, Wisconsin Clean Cities, recognize the efforts and many successes of the members for reducing their dependence on petroleum-based fuels, implementing alternative fuel vehicles and infrastructure, and for helping improve our air quality.
Maria Redmond, Wisconsin Office of Energy Innovation, discusses what is happening in Wisconsin with alternative fuels and technologies. Lorrie Lisek & Erika Noble, Wisconsin Clean Cities, recognize the efforts and many successes of the Wisconsin Smart Fleet partners for reducing their dependence on petroleum-based fuels, implementing alternative fuel vehicles and infrastructure, and for helping improve our air quality.
Each year WCC recognizes the efforts and many successes of it's members for reducing their dependence on petroleum-based fuels, implementing alternative fuel vehicles and infrastructure, and for helping improve our air quality. Also, this year we will be recognizing our Wisconsin Smart Fleet partners and celebrating our 20th year as a coalition!
The SmartWay® Program is a public-private initiative to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and air pollution created by freight transportation in corporate supply chains.
Presenters included:
- Tim Verbeke, Wisconsin Clean Cities
- Patrice Thornton, SmartWay Program
- Joel Hirschboeck, Kwik Trip
Maria Redmond, WI State Energy Office and Lorrie Lisek, WI Clean Cities, presented information on the Propane Autogas Initiatives and Updates for our Propane Autogas Roundtable in Oak Creek, WI.
Presented by Maria Redmond, Wisconsin State Energy Office, Lorrie Lisek, Wisconsin Clean Cities, and Mark O’Connell, Wisconsin Clean Transportation Program, on May 7, 2013, at the Wisconsin Clean Transportation Program Partner Showcase in Madison, WI.
Lorrie Lisek & Erika Noble, Wisconsin Clean Cities, recognize the efforts and many successes of the members for reducing their dependence on petroleum-based fuels, implementing alternative fuel vehicles and infrastructure, and for helping improve our air quality.
Maria Redmond, Wisconsin Office of Energy Innovation, discusses what is happening in Wisconsin with alternative fuels and technologies. Lorrie Lisek & Erika Noble, Wisconsin Clean Cities, recognize the efforts and many successes of the Wisconsin Smart Fleet partners for reducing their dependence on petroleum-based fuels, implementing alternative fuel vehicles and infrastructure, and for helping improve our air quality.
Each year WCC recognizes the efforts and many successes of it's members for reducing their dependence on petroleum-based fuels, implementing alternative fuel vehicles and infrastructure, and for helping improve our air quality. Also, this year we will be recognizing our Wisconsin Smart Fleet partners and celebrating our 20th year as a coalition!
The SmartWay® Program is a public-private initiative to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and air pollution created by freight transportation in corporate supply chains.
Presenters included:
- Tim Verbeke, Wisconsin Clean Cities
- Patrice Thornton, SmartWay Program
- Joel Hirschboeck, Kwik Trip
Maria Redmond, WI State Energy Office and Lorrie Lisek, WI Clean Cities, presented information on the Propane Autogas Initiatives and Updates for our Propane Autogas Roundtable in Oak Creek, WI.
Presented by Maria Redmond, Wisconsin State Energy Office, Lorrie Lisek, Wisconsin Clean Cities, and Mark O’Connell, Wisconsin Clean Transportation Program, on May 7, 2013, at the Wisconsin Clean Transportation Program Partner Showcase in Madison, WI.
Each year WCC recognizes the efforts and many successes of it's members for reducing their dependence on petroleum-based fuels, implementing alternative fuel vehicles and infrastructure, and for helping improve our air quality. Also, this year we will be recognizing our Wisconsin Smart Fleet partners and celebrating our 20th year as a coalition!
Introduction: Roundtable Issues Captured and Accomplishments to DateWisconsin Clean Cities
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4. Team Wisconsin
AME… EAN CITIES
EW N
N
NEW S
IN CL
S
TAFF
SCON
I
•Ba
W
O R Y…
RRIT
W TE E!
NE
EWID
STAT
iley Br
own, Pr
oject C
•Erika
oordin
Noble,
ator
Projec
•Steph
t Coor
anie Sm
d i na t o
ith, Pro
r
•Ciara
ject Co
O’Neill
ordina
– Inter
tor
•Cass
n
ie Brid
ger – P
/T Proj
ect Ass
istant
Wisconsin Clean Cities
4
5. Key Stakeholders
•
Local Government Agencies
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Wisconsin State Energy Office
Chippewa County EDC
City of Milwaukee
City of Port Washington Police Dept.
Dane County
WI Department of Natural Resources
Milwaukee County
Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage
District
– Washburn County
•
•
Utilities
– We Energies
– Madison Gas & Electric
– Oconomowoc Utilities
WCC Members Across Wisconsin
Fuel Providers
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
AmeriGas
Boehlke Bottled Gas Corp.
Charter Fuels
Clean Energy Fuels
Como Oil & Propane
E.H. Wolf & Sons
Ferrellgas
GAIN Clean Fuels
SunPower Biodiesel
Trillium CNG
Wisconsin Clean Cities
5
6. Key Stakeholders cont.
•
Fleets
– Barnes, Inc.
– Contract Transport Services, LLC.
– Convenience Transportation, LLC.
– Dynamic Recycling
– Go Riteway Transportation Group
– Harter’s Quick Clean Up
– Hribar Logistics
– Lake Michigan Carferry Service
– Menard, Inc.
– Michel’s Corporation
– Outpost Natural Foods
– Paper Transport
– Remy Battery Co., Inc.
– Time Transport, Inc.
– Transit Express
– Veolia Water North America
– Veriha Trucking, Inc.
– Waste Management*
*Denotes National Clean Fleets Partner
•
Station Retailers
– Kwik Trip, Inc.*
– Probe Alternative Fuel Services
•
Nonprofit Organizations
– American Lung Association in WI
– Wisconsin Biodiesel Association
– Wisconsin Propane Gas Association
Wisconsin Clean Cities
6
7. Key Stakeholders cont.
•
•
Schools
–
–
–
–
–
Green Lake School District
De Soto School District
Marquette University
Milwaukee Area Technical College
Waukesha County Technical College
Other
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Wisconsin Clean Cities
ANGI Energy Systems
Altec Industries
Barnes Green Energy
BioCNG, LLC
Cummins NPower, LLC
Diesel Outfitters, LLC
Dual Fuel Systems
Endpoint Solutions Corp
Espar Heating Systems
ET Environmental Corp
ESW Group
Inland Power Group
International Motorwerks
Maxx Air Group, Inc.
Mid-State Truck Service
Midwest Green Solutions
Odyne Systems
Parker Hannifin Corp.
PST Cylinders, Inc.
ROUSH Clean Tech
Thermo/Cense, Inc.
Truck Country Freightliner
Wisconsin Bus Sales
7
8. A State of Fuel Diversity!
•
•
•
•
•
Natural Gas (CNG, LNG, Biogas)
Propane
Electricity
Biodiesel
Ethanol
Wisconsin Alternative Fuel Stations
Fuel Type
Public
Stations
Private
Stations
CNG – Compressed natural gas
34
10
LNG – Liquefied natural gas
1
0
Electric Chargers
95
26
Propane
51
2
Biodiesel
3
1
114
1
E85
Wisconsin Clean Cities
8
9. Current Projects
• Wisconsin Clean Transportation Program
–
–
–
–
–
$15 million in funding from ARRA, $17 million in cost share
4 year ARRA funded program
375+ alternative fuel/advanced technology vehicles
18 alternative fuel stations
150 outreach events reaching over 19,000 members of the public
Wisconsin Clean Cities
9
10. Current Projects cont.
• Natural Gas for Transportation Roundtables
–
–
–
–
Co-hosted with the WI State Energy Office
Endorsed by Governor Walker
Four meetings held around the state each averaging 125 attendees
Created to overcome barriers for fleets to adopt natural gas vehicles and install
supporting infrastructure
– Held biogas breakout sessions
•
Electric Vehicle Task Force
– 30+ Committee Members
– Developed 12 Target Issues
– Collaborate to break barriers and ease the adoption
of electric vehicles
– Working to develop Work Place Charging Initiative
Wisconsin Clean Cities
10
11. Current Projects cont.
• Forwarding Wisconsin’s Fuel Choice ($500,000 DOE
grant funded project)
– Partnership with WI State Energy Office and WI State Technical
College System
– Strengthen Wisconsin's alternative fuels market through policy,
barrier reduction, safety and training initiatives, and outreach
programs
– Deliverables include:
•
•
•
•
•
Development of a Wisconsin Smart Fleet Program – website launch January, 2014
Analysis of statewide policies and incentives
Developing internal company policies for program partners
Mitigating barriers for and educating fuel retailers
Evaluating and expanding training opportunities and
education programs in the technical colleges
• Hold educational workshops and events
• Prepare online and print outreach articles regarding the program
Wisconsin Clean Cities
11
12. Current Projects cont.
• The Lake Michigan Corridor Alternative Fuel
Implementation Initiative ($700,000+ DOE grant funded
project)
– Regional partnership with the Gas Technology Institute and the Lake
Michigan Consortium (Wisconsin, Chicago, and Northern Indiana Clean Cities Coalitions)
– The initiative includes:
• Facilitating opening municipal stations to shared and/or public access
• Assisting creation of inspection criteria for converted
vehicles (CNG/LPG)
• Weights and measures education, training, and testing
equipment
• Educating public fuel retailers
• Identifying local regulatory barriers and developing
mitigation strategies
• Partnering with local colleges to develop “Train the
Trainer” programs for first responders
• Providing workshops for fire marshals and code officials
for CNG, LNG, and LPG
Wisconsin Clean Cities
12
13. Current Projects cont.
•
Eco-Driving for Class 8 Over-the-Road Trucks (CMAQ Funds)
– Partnership with WI Department of Natural Resources and Waukesha
County Technical College
– Develop curriculum and train drivers to drive more efficiently to reduce
petroleum consumption
– Incorporate curriculum on idle reduction strategies and methods
•
Fleet Manager Training
– Partnering with University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee to develop online
training classes for Fleet Managers
– Incorporate Clean Cities topics into curriculum
– Clean Cities Members attend at a discounted price
•
Winter Webinar Series
– Partnering with South Shore Clean Cities to present
a series of clean cities topic webinars
– Topics included:
CNG maintenance shop safety, propane, biodiesel,
Clean Cities tools, and more
Wisconsin Clean Cities
13
14. WCC Accomplishments
• Decreases due to:
– Coalition transition
– Changes in DOE Reporting
Strategies
• Increases due to:
Reporting Stakeholders
2009 2010 2011
2012
7
18
35
57
Wisconsin Clean Cities
– New Leadership
– Significant Membership
Growth
– Improved Membership &
Stakeholder Communications
– Improved Internal
Preparation and Planning
14
17. Eye on WI Clean Cities
Wisconsin Clean Cities
17
18. Eye on WI Clean Cities
Wisconsin Clean Cities
18
19. Eye on WI Clean Cities
Wisconsin Clean Cities
19
20. Clean Cities…Celebrating two decades of change
In 1993, many people had never heard of alternative fuels.
Today, organizations in the public and private sectors are striving
to become more sustainable, the price of oil continues to
fluctuate, and the impacts of climate change are growing,
making the need for alternative fuels self-evident.
Alternative Fuels…Not an alternative, a Choice!
Wisconsin Clean Cities
20
21. 2014 Celebrating 20 years of
“Driving Wisconsin Forward!”
Wisconsin Clean Cities
21
22. 2014 Celebrating 20 years of
“Driving Wisconsin Forward!”
2013 Wisconsin Clean Cities
Annual Stakeholder Meeting
•Approval of By-Laws
•Approval of 2014 Work Plan & Budget
Wisconsin Clean Cities
22
23. Wisconsin Clean Cities
Board of Directors
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Craig Fischer
Mary Smarelli
Jerry Medinger
Jeff Tews
Ruanna Hayes
Bob Reagan
Jeff Shefchik
Jeffrey Bach
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Katrina Bell
Matt Jarmuz
Bryan Nudelbacher
George Stone
Martin Franzkowiak
Matthew Carr
Tim Glynn
Wisconsin Clean Cities
23
24. Wisconsin Clean Cities
Annual Stakeholder
Awards
Forward Fleet Awards
Service Award
Cornerstone Award
Wisconsin Clean Cities
24
25. Wisconsin Clean Cities
Thank you for a great year and being a
part of Wisconsin Clean Cities!
Wisconsin Clean Cities
25
Editor's Notes
What technologies we use to meet our goal
Clean Cities is a fuel-neutral program--supporting all EPAct alternative fuels, including: biodiesel, electricity, ethanol, hydrogen, natural gas, and propane.
Clean Cities also supports fuel economy improvements and idle reduction, as well as trip elimination measures, like rideshare and telecommuting programs.
We provide stakeholders with unbiased, objective information about these technologies.
What technologies we use to meet our goal
Clean Cities is a fuel-neutral program--supporting all EPAct alternative fuels, including: biodiesel, electricity, ethanol, hydrogen, natural gas, and propane.
Clean Cities also supports fuel economy improvements and idle reduction, as well as trip elimination measures, like rideshare and telecommuting programs.
We provide stakeholders with unbiased, objective information about these technologies.
What technologies we use to meet our goal
Clean Cities is a fuel-neutral program--supporting all EPAct alternative fuels, including: biodiesel, electricity, ethanol, hydrogen, natural gas, and propane.
Clean Cities also supports fuel economy improvements and idle reduction, as well as trip elimination measures, like rideshare and telecommuting programs.
We provide stakeholders with unbiased, objective information about these technologies.
Participants receive certificate for course completion