| 
NEWS
February 6, 2008 |
Contact:
David Vossbrink
Communications Director
(408) 501-7700
|
Airport
Takes Next Steps for Cleaner Air in San José
SJC to increase Alternative Fuels Program by converting
fleets to compressed natural gas with help from VTA and Air Board grants
SAN JOSE, CA – Mineta San José International
Airport (SJC) will increase its commitment to cleaner air by arranging
up to $1.3 million in new funding for two projects that will enhance the
airport’s publicly accessible compressed natural gas fueling station
and provide more incentives to assist owners of taxis and shuttle vans
to convert vehicles to CNG.
Upgrades
to the airport’s CNG fueling station, estimated to cost $727,000,
will increase its capacity, efficiency, reliability, and accessibility
both for the airport’s fleets and the general public. Completion
of this project is expected by the end of this year.
In addition,
over the next two years SJC’s Alternative Fuel Grant Program will
maintain its support for the CNG conversion of up to 55 additional vehicles
with larger incentive grants of $4000 per taxi and $8000 per shuttle van
to fleet owners that are permitted to operate at the airport. The program
is estimated to cost $555,000, with up to $400,000 coming from vehicle
operators.
These steps
are assisted with a new grant of $606,000 from Santa Clara Valley Transportation
Authority and Bay Area Air Quality Management District. SJC will match
the grant with a funding commitment of $275,000. The San José City
Council approved accepting the grant yesterday.
“Air
quality is a key component to a healthy San José. Enabling airport
fleets to run on natural gas will help decrease greenhouse gas emissions
as well as reduce our dependency on foreign oil,” said Mayor Chuck
Reed. “In addition, this conversion is a critical step in helping
accomplish San José’s Green Vision goal of having 100 percent
of city vehicles run on alternative fuels.”
“As
a board member for both the Air Quality District and VTA, I’m pleased
we’re teaming up with the airport for this clean air grant,”
said Palo Alto City Council Member Yoriko Kishimoto. “Together we
can greatly enhance the airport's environmental efforts as well as provide
a benefit to environmentally conscientious individuals choosing to use
alternative fuels.”
Since 2005
SJC has encouraged clean air conversion of taxis by permitting CNG taxis
to operate every day at the airport instead of only alternate days that
gasoline-fueled taxis are allowed. As a result, the number of CNG taxis
working at SJC has already increased from fewer than 30 in mid-2005 to
130 vehicles today, and they now account for more than 40 percent of all
taxi trips from the airport compared to six percent in 2005.
Since 2003,
the Airport also has been able to eliminate the use of more 1.3 million
gallons of diesel fuel through its conversion of its own shuttle bus fleet
to CNG. This has saved over $3 million in fuel costs and annually reduced
vehicle exhaust emissions by over 70 tons.
The Airport
received $700,000 from the Bay Area Air Quality Management District in
2002 to replace twenty diesel shuttle buses with CNG-fueled shuttles.
It will complete the conversion of the remainder of its fleet this spring
with the scheduled replacement of another fourteen diesel shuttles with
the help of another BAAQMD grant of $700,000.
SJC opened its state-of-the-art compressed natural gas station in August
2003, which is also open for use by the general public and commercial
fleets with CNG vehicles. The fueling station originally cost $3,100,000,
for which the Airport received grants totaling $750,000 from the California
Energy Commission and VTA.
As the owner
of its own CNG fueling station, SJC provides direct benefits to both its
ground transportation operations and the public because the airport can
take advantage of incentives, grants and programs that allow it to pass
cost savings on to taxis, other fleets, and other privately-owned vehicles.
For example, SJC now receives more than $200,000 annually from federal
excise tax credits on CNG fuel dispensed from its station as a result
of the Energy Policy Act of 2005.
The airport’s
clean air efforts were recognized in 2007 with a national achievement
award from NGV America, a national trade association that promotes alternative-fuel
vehicles, and by the American Lung Association in 2004.
SJC’s
partners for its successful alternative fuels program include Pacific
Gas and Electric Company, Silicon Valley Clean Cities Coalition, Bay Area
Air Quality Management District, California Energy Commission, Santa Clara
Valley Transportation Authority, NGVAmerica, and Alternative Fuel Vehicle
Institute.
About
Mineta San José International Airport
Mineta San
José International Airport, a self-supporting enterprise, is owned
and operated by the City of San José. SJC served 10.7 million passengers
and handled approximately 209 million pounds of air cargo in 2007. SJC
has 166 flights a day on 13 domestic and international carriers to 30
nonstop destinations.
For more
airport information, visit www.sjc.org, or call Airport Customer Service
at (408) 501-0979. Motorists can also tune their radios to 530 AM within
two miles of SJC for current information on airport traffic, parking and
security.
-SJC-
1732
N. First Street, Suite 600, San José, CA 95112-4538 24 Hour Media
Line: 408.501.7700 |