Trillium CNG to build hydrogen fueling station for Orange County Transportation Authority
HOUSTON – Trillium CNG, one of the nation’s leading providers of compressed natural gas (CNG) vehicle fueling facilities and part of the Love’s Family of Companies, today announces plans to expand its services. The company will design, build and maintain hydrogen fueling stations. Trillium’s new services also include electric vehicle charging infrastructure, solar panel installation, and microgrid design and construction. The company will begin construction on its first hydrogen fueling station for fuel cell electric buses this summer for the Orange County Transportation Authority’s (OCTA) Santa Ana, California, facility.
“OCTA has a long history of implementing clean sustainable technology into our fleet. As we look toward the future, it’s important we continue expanding these efforts,” said Cliff Thorne, OCTA’s director of maintenance and motorist services. “What’s critical is ensuring we meet the needs of the agency from an operational perspective and continue delivering high-quality transit service for our riders.”
The project is the result of several groups working together. Air Products & Chemicals, Inc., the leader in hydrogen fuel and technology in North America, will supply and deliver liquid hydrogen, a cryogenic liquid fuel, on a weekly basis to the facility. The fuel will then be pumped and vaporized into high pressure gas before being dispensed onto buses. The Center for Transportation and the Environment (CTE) a nonprofit that advocates for clean, sustainable, innovative transportation and energy technologies, is managing the project. CTE secured funds for the project from the California Air Resources Board (CARB) through the California Climate Investments program, a statewide program that puts billions of cap-and-trade dollars to work reducing greenhouse gas emissions, strengthening the economy, and improving public health and the environment.
“California is proud to be on the forefront of the fight for clean air,” said Steve Cliff, CARB deputy executive officer. “Funds from the state’s landmark cap-and-trade program help forward-looking transit agencies like OCTA secure clean energy such as hydrogen to modernize and transform their fleets, enabling them to meet both our climate and air quality goals.”
Trillium has plans to introduce electric vehicle charging stations for its Customers and at select Love’s Travel Stops locations later this year. Solar panel installation and microgrid design and construction will also be introduced later this year.