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To: Celtictrader who wrote (162362)1/12/2012 7:21:30 PM
From: Bearcatbob1 Recommendation  Respond to of 206146
 
I trust it is all private money and I hope it will be a great success.



To: Celtictrader who wrote (162362)1/13/2012 12:33:34 PM
From: Dennis Roth2 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 206146
 

ANGH Route map shows initial phase of America's Natural Gas Highway, a network of LNG fueling stations along main trucking corridors being built by Clean Energy to support the growing deployment of natural gas-fueled trucks for goods movement from coast-to-coast and border-to-border. (Graphic: Business Wire)

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ANGH Route map shows initial phase of America's Natural Gas Highway, a network of LNG fueling stations along main trucking corridors being built by Clean Energy to support the growing deployment of natural gas-fueled trucks for goods movement from coast-to-coast and border-to-border. (Graphic: Business Wire)... More »




To: Celtictrader who wrote (162362)2/28/2012 9:06:07 AM
From: Dennis Roth1 Recommendation  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 206146
 
Gassing up — naturally

vindy.com

By Karl Henkel

khenkel@vindy.com

YOUNGSTOWN

Chesapeake Energy Corp. plans to bring compressed natural-gas stations to the Mahoning Valley, bucking a regional trend of ignoring alternative- energy sources.

“We are currently in talks with a large regional retailer, which will bring 10 to 20 stations to Northeast Ohio, Western Pennsylvania and West Virginia,” said Keith Fuller, director of corporate development. “Ohio needs more public-access CNG stations. There are currently only four in the state.”

Two more are expected to open before the end of March in Dublin and Columbus.
[snip]



To: Celtictrader who wrote (162362)3/23/2012 12:22:58 PM
From: Dennis Roth3 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 206146
 
Valero, Chesapeake look to build natural gas stations
Updated 08:11 p.m., Thursday, March 22, 2012
Read more: mysanantonio.com

The San Antonio-based refiner and marketer and natural-gas driller Chesapeake Energy Corp. are in preliminary talks about joining forces to add natural gas fueling stations along major Texas interstates, and they're hoping to get state grant money to help them along.

“It's doable,” Jim Greenwood, Valero's vice president of government relations, said during an energy talk in San Antonio this week.

Last year, the Legislature passed a measure to make grant money available to individuals or businesses to develop natural gas fueling stations. The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality is administering the program and said in January that it has $4.5 million in grants available for fueling stations along major interstates linking Houston, Dallas-Fort Worth and San Antonio.

The fueling stations must be located no more than three miles from interstate highways and available to the public.