The Barnett Shale is more than 7,000 feet below the surface and is comprised of dense non-permeable rock. According to Dr. Ken Morgan, a geologist at Texas Christian University, “Solid hard rocks that are 7000 feet down don’t subside. You have more than a mile of solid rock that holds it all up. Subsidence occurs when you have loose, soft materials like in Houston (sands, clays, etc.) but not in cemented hard rocks like the Barnett Shale.”


- Natural Gas Vehicles of America
About Natural Gas Vehicles - Natural Gas Vehicles of America
Natural Gas Vehicles Home - U.S. Department of Energy
- Texas General Land Office
- North Central Texas Council on Governments
General Transportation - North Central Texas Council on Governments
Clean Vehicles - Clean Cities
- Pickens Plan
Home Page - Pickens Plan
The Plan - CGN Now (Chesapeake)
- The T - Fort Worth Transportation Authority
Facts About Natural Gas Vehicles
Fort Worth sits atop the most productive natural gas play in the United States –- the Barnett Shale -- and yet most of the natural gas being produced here is piped out of North Texas to be used for electricity, heating, and industrial purposes.
There is so much natural gas beneath our feet that could be used for transportation purposes, to fuel garbage trucks, street sweepers, police fleets, public buses – right here in North Texas.
Natural gas is already being used for transportation in our area and elsewhere in Texas. A full 98 percent of the "T"s bus fleet runs on compressed natural gas (CNG), with buses re-fueling daily at the Fort Worth Transportation Authority's private fueling station on East Lancaster Avenue.
D/FW International Airport uses more than 300 CNG buses to transport travelers to and from parking lots and operates a public CNG fueling station. The city of Dallas just added to its fleet more than 60 Honda Civic GXs, the cleanest car in the U.S. according to the Environmental Protection Agency.
In January, the city of San Antonio dedicated its first natural gas fueling station with an announcement it will roll 30 CNG-powered garbage trucks onto its streets this spring.
Right now there are more than 150,000 natural gas vehicles on U.S. roads and more than 5 million worldwide, according to the industry group, Natural Gas Vehicles for America (NGVA).
Around the country a growing number of cities and transportation authorities are operating bus, car, and even garbage truck fleets fueled by natural gas. Compared with vehicles fueled by diesel or gasoline, natural gas vehicles can emit much lower amounts of harmful substances like nitrogen oxides, carcinogenic pollutants, and the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide, according to the U.S. Department of Energy.
On one of its websites, the Department of Energy promotes natural gas vehicles as an "immediate solution" to the nation's energy security needs. Fact is, natural gas is in abundant supply in the U.S. and it is a cleaner-burning fuel than either diesel or gasoline.
Incentives
In the state of Texas, the General Land Office is also promoting natural gas vehicles for public vehicle fleets. It has a $5 million grant program to help heavy-duty fleets like garbage trucks and street sweepers start using natural gas.
The North Texas Council of Governments also provides grants for clean vehicle projects in an effort to reduce ozone-causing pollution in the DFW region. The primary cause of ozone is nitrogen oxides, most of which comes from vehicles that run on regular gas or diesel. A myriad of federal incentives are also in place and may well increase under the Obama administration.
While using natural gas for transportation is in the early stages in our part of the nation, there is every reason for Texas, and particularly North Texas, to take the lead nationally. After all, we are home to the Barnett Shale.
Green Fleets – "The Future is Now"
Natural Gas Vehicle Symposium More Info »
"The Future is Now" Presentations
Take a look at the presentations from "Green Fleets: the Future is Now," a conference on natural gas vehicles held in Fort Worth June 17. More Info »




