http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2014/07/29/how-garbage-cows-and-flushing-are-about-to-expan-2.aspx
How Garbage, Cows, and Flushing are About to Expand Supercharger Coverage
for Tesla Motors
By Maxx Chatsko | July 29, 2014

[images  
http://g.foolcdn.com/editorial/images/139469/116_tslasupercharger100_large.PNG
The 100th Supercharger station opened on April 24, 2014, in Hamilton, N.J.
We may see 1,000 sooner than you think. Source: Tesla Motors

http://g.foolcdn.com/editorial/images/139469/116_tslasupercharger2015_large.PNG
This is what the Supercharger network should look like in 2015. Source:
Tesla Motors

http://g.foolcdn.com/editorial/images/139469/116_abcbiogasus_large.PNG
Red dots are farms, yellow are landfills, and blue are wastewater treatment
plants. Source: American Biogas Council
]

There aren't many electric vehicles on the road in the United States,
especially when compared to the incumbent population of petrol-powered
automobiles, but America does have an ample and renewable supply of cows,
garbage, and flushable toilets. Leveraging our nation's strengths in the
latter could help make electric vehicle charging stations -- including Tesla
Motors' Supercharger sites -- as numerous and widespread as gas stations.
No, this isn't a joke. And yes, this is actually quite probable. In fact,
you'll wonder why it wasn't attempted sooner.

How will it work? The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency will now
recognize natural gas fuels sourced from biogas (also called biomethane or
renewable natural gas) captured at landfills, farms, and wastewater
treatment plants as advanced biofuels. That won't help Tesla Motors as much
as it helps Waste Management and Veolia Environment, but the agency also
ruled that electricity created from combusting biomethane and used to power
electric vehicles qualifies for the same advanced biofuel incentives
(electric vehicles are covered under the Renewable Fuel Standard, too). The
new rule could possibly bring the Tesla Supercharger network to your town by
the end of the decade. Here's how.

Tesla Motors' ambitious plans
The fierce battle over range anxiety and whether Tesla Motors' electric
vehicle-charging stations would provide the coverage needed to combat it has
played out many times in the last several years. Someone takes an ill-fated
ride in a Tesla Model S and writes furiously about it, only to be refuted by
an enthusiast easily completing a cross-country trip several weeks later.
I'm not here to say the planned network is ill-equipped to cover its
drivers. After all, it is intended to cover 98% of the American population
in 2015, as displayed in the map ...

Covering 98% of the population means drivers will never be more than 100
miles away from a Supercharger. That's a pretty amazing accomplishment for
the short amount of time needed to reach the milestone -- which will only
improve as Tesla Motors brings mass market cars to market -- but there's
plenty of work left to be done. Why not leverage America's vast biogas
reserves to bring a Supercharger to every town or municipality?

Biomethane boost
It's still much too early to say whether Tesla Motors will join forces with
companies such as Waste Management, Veolia Environment, and large farming
operations to expand Supercharger coverage, but the partnership potential
makes almost too much sense. Regions with higher populations will have a
greater need for charging stations. However, they'll also produce more
garbage and wastewater and have a greater need to process such wastes. And
while large farming operations are located in less dense population centers,
they produce as much as 34% of the nation's methane. Good news: biomethane
can be purified to pipeline-quality gas and shipped throughout the nation to
where it is needed most.

What's the potential for biomethane? The American Biogas Council estimates
(link opens PDF) that roughly 540 landfills (22% of capacity), over 2,000
wastewater treatment plants (63%), and more than 6,300 farms (97%) across
the nation have the potential to economically capture and use biomethane but
aren't doing so today. In addition, thousands of sites could economically
produce biogas from food waste or send it to an anaerobic digester at the
local wastewater treatment plant to boost its output. To wrap your head
around all of the untapped potential, consider the sites that are
operational today.

Now imagine if each dot represented a Supercharger. Fortunately, the future
may arrive sooner than later. Waste Management has deployed 10 novel systems
to optimize the production and capture of biomethane from its landfill sites
with the aim of integrating the technology across its assets. The company is
also on pace to produce over 950 megawatts of electricity from biogas by
2020. Meanwhile, Veolia Environment owns and operates over 200 wastewater
treatment facilities throughout North America. That's nearly double the
current fleet size of Supercharger stations in the United States! ...
[© fool.com]




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