Clients Profile

Sky Harbor International Airport, Phoenix, AZ
Los Angeles International Airport, Los Angeles, CA

Airports are increasingly coming under greater scrutiny from air quality officials who see the high concentration of air pollution in and around airports. Several major airports including Los Angeles International (LAX) and Sky Harbor International Airport have adopted clean-fuel vehicle policies and have extensively deployed natural gas vehicles in their respective fleets.
In major metropolitan areas, airports are often a major source of congestion and pollution. Many airports are now looking to deploy greater numbers of alternative fuel vehicles as a method of mitigating impacts of growth and expansion. Two airports in particular that work with Clean Energy, Los Angeles International and Sky Harbor International have made substantial progress in deploying natural gas vehicles.

Los Angeles International Airport (LAX)
Clean Energy owns the nation’s premier retail fleet access CNG station at 104th Street and Aviation Boulevard, adjacent to the Los Angeles International Airport. The station serves several customers including the SuperShuttle fleets, Los Angeles Department of Airports, and Hawthorne Police Department. With a capacity of 600 gallons per hour, Clean Energy can serve the most demanding of fleets at this location. The airport takes air quality so seriously that recently it mandated that all franchised shared-ride operators to convert 100% of their fleets to alternative fuel by the year 2003.
In addition to the 24-hour access station at Aviation and 104th, Clean Energy also owns and operates a 24-hour access CNG fueling station on the tarmac at LAX near the United Airlines maintenance terminal. This station serves various airport fleets including United Airlines and the Department of Airports.

Sky Harbor International Airport
Clean Energy owns the nation’s largest public access natural gas fueling station at Sky Harbor International Airport, Phoenix, Arizona. The station serves several fleets including the City of Phoenix Department of Aviation, Valley Coach (operator of 20 airport transit buses), Tempe Transit, US Postal Service and SuperShuttle. Clean Energy was recently awarded a contract to build a second station on the East side of the airport that will serve additional buses, taxicabs, and even a growing number of retail customers.

Waste Management of the Desert (WMD), Palm Desert
City of Seal Beach, CA
Tempe Transit, Tempe, AZ
SuperShuttle

Historical Information
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