DEARBORN, Mich., June 16, 2011 – The next time you
hail a taxi, you could be jumping in to one that runs on compressed
natural gas (CNG). Chicago and Los Angeles are now the two latest cities
to roll out Ford Transit Connect Taxis fueled by CNG.
In Chicago today, Taxi Medallion Management will put 12 Ford Transit
Connect Taxis powered by compressed natural gas (CNG) into service as
part of an event celebrating the increased presence of CNG in Chicago. A
CNG Ford Transit Connect Taxi will participate in the opening of a new
Clean Energy CNG filling station and natural gas advocate T. Boone
Pickens will speak at the event after arriving in a CNG Transit Connect
Taxi.
Ford also announced two Los Angeles-area cab companies have ordered
nearly 120 Ford Transit Connect CNG Taxis, adding the nation’s
second-largest city to the growing list of large urban areas quickly
adopting the versatile vehicle.
“The Transit Connect Taxi was developed using market research we
conducted with the taxi industry to better understand what customers
wanted in a future vehicle,” said Gerald Koss, marketing manager, Ford
Fleet Operations. “The more conversations we had, the more interest we
saw in a taxi with the flexibility of offering a compressed natural gas
version.”
Los Angeles and Chicago aren’t the only cities jumping on the CNG
taxi bandwagon. In Connecticut, Metro Taxi of West Haven and Yellow Cab
Company of Hartford have ordered a total of 70 Transit Connect Taxis
that will be powered by CNG and in service by the end of summer. Other
cities where CNG Transit Connect Taxis have been ordered include Las
Vegas and St. Louis.
Philadelphia is expected to join the list after city officials there recently approved it for use as well, said Koss.
California, here it comes
Yellow Cab of Anaheim and Cabco Yellow Inc. of Orange County have
ordered a combined 119 CNG-powered Transit Connect Taxis. The first 50
will be delivered within the next two months. The rest are scheduled to
be delivered by the end of 2011.
The Ford dealership, South Bay Ford in Los Angeles, will deliver the taxi units to the cab companies.
Larry Gach, sales manager, Ford Commercial Truck Sales and Marketing,
said he expects orders in California to increase after the California
Air Resources Board (CARB) approved the use of Transit Connect Taxis
modified by BAF Technologies to run on CNG. BAF Technologies has been
certified by Ford as a Quality Vehicle Modifier to convert standard
Transit Connect Taxis into CNG-powered cabs.
CARB is part of the California Environmental Protection Agency, an
organization that reports to the governor’s office and is designed to
promote and protect public health, welfare and ecological resources
through reduction of air pollutants.
To receive CARB certification, a vehicle must demonstrate that its
exhaust and evaporative emission control systems are durable and comply
with the emission standards for the vehicle’s useful life.
Blowing into the Windy City
Taxi Medallion Management bought the 12 CNG Transit Connect Taxis it is putting into service today earlier this year.
The purchase is part of the company’s goal of reducing emissions by
25 percent, said Michael Levine, CEO of Taxi Medallion Management.
According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, CNG is less
expensive and burns cleaner than gasoline, resulting in 30 to 40 percent
less greenhouse gas emissions.
“We are adding CNG-powered vehicles to our fleet in order to reduce
the effective cost of fuel for our drivers, and to introduce cleaner
vehicles for the environment,” said Levine.
Ford offers engine prep packages that allow conversions to CNG and
liquefied propane gas (LPG). Both CNG and LPG lower taxi fleets’
operating costs and are better for the environment.
CNG Transit Connect Taxis in other regions
Orders of CNG Transit Connect Taxis are expected to come from other
areas of the country as well, including Philadelphia, the fifth-largest
metropolitan area in the United States. City officials there approved
the CNG Transit Connect Taxi for use on its streets. The city regulates
the types of vehicles that can be used as taxis. To be approved, a
vehicle must meet basic size requirements for headroom, legroom and
cargo space.
“The Ford CNG Transit Connect Taxi has many great features of
interest to the riding public,” said James Ney, director, Taxicab &
Limousine Division, Philadelphia Parking Authority. “Its abbreviated
footprint makes it perfect for use on our narrow, congested streets here
in Philadelphia.”
The amount of space in the Transit Connect Taxi is winning over
taxicab company owners such as Fred Sweets, of St. Louis American Cab.
He recently ordered his first Transit Connect Taxi that will be modified
to run on CNG.
Sweets said he was immediately intrigued by the shape and size of the
Transit Connect when he first saw it being driven as a delivery van.
But before buying one, Sweets said he conducted his own research by
asking users of the standard Transit Connect, such as flower delivery
businesses, about their experiences with the small commercial van.
“I asked them how they liked it, what their mileage was and how it
was holding up,” said Sweets. “I got nothing but praise for the vehicle.
I knew then that I had to add it to our fleet.”
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