Austin Receives $5 Mil. Grant to Buy Alt-Fuel Vehicles & Service Award
AUSTIN, TEXAS – The City of Austin has earned a $5 million grant to purchase alternative-fuel and/or hybrid vehicles and its Fleet Services Division Centers 1,5, and 6 achieved the ASE Blue Seal of Excellence.
AUSTIN, TEXAS – The City of Austin has earned a $5 million grant to purchase alternative-fuel and/or hybrid vehicles for its fleet from the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. This grant comes on the heels of Austin’s Fleet Services Division Centers 1,5, and 6 achieving the Blue Seal of Excellence designation by the National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence (ASE), a national award highlighting the excellence of their work.
A press release from the City of Austin stated that out of more than one million dealerships, independent repair shops, and fleet garages in both public and private sectors, only 1,464 have achieved this level of recognition. Only 86 facilities in Texas have achieved this honor. Of those, 16 are public sector municipal facilities, and three are from the City of Austin.
With regard to grant money earned, Austin’s fleet has received more than $6 million in grant money for alternative fuel/hybrid vehicles and fueling infrastructure. As part of the City of Austin’s Climate Protection Plan, the goal is to make all City vehicles carbon-neutral by 2020.
The Austin Business Journal reported that the vehicles the city plans to purchase with the $5 million grant (which will cover part of the $3.2 million in costs) includes five CNG sweepers for Solid Waste Services, Public Works, and Aviation, two diesel hybrid bucket trucks for Austin Energy, two electric trucks for the City’s Parks and Recreation Department, and 18 natural gas refuse trucks for the City’s Solid Waste Services.
A press release from the city stated that Fleet Services is a division of Financial and Administrative Services, has approximately 200 employees who process more than 45,000 City vehicle maintenance orders each year. The office maintains six service centers with 40 fuel sites including one compressed natural gas, six propane and four ethanol stations. Most of the diesel sites carry bio-diesel fuel. The sites dispense approximately five millions gallons a year with 58 percent of the vehicles being alternative fuel/hybrid-capable.
More Green Fleet

Inspiration Mobility Acquires Key Electrada Assets
Inspiration Mobility Group has acquired select assets of Electrada, adding the fleet electrification provider's team, technology, and charging infrastructure development capabilities to its energy management business.
Read More →
Turning Connected Vehicle Data Into Decisions That Matter
Fleet leaders have more data than ever, but turning that data into clear, actionable decisions remains a challenge. This white paper shows how leading organizations are using connected vehicle data to improve safety, reduce costs, and optimize fleet performance. Learn how to turn insight into action across your fleet.
Read More →Are You Tracking Your Fleet's True Total Cost of Ownership?
Bobit Business Media surveyed 190 fleet professionals and found that while most fleets are tracking costs, fragmented systems and data gaps are keeping true TCO visibility out of reach. With rising pressure to control spend in an increasingly volatile environment, the gap between what fleets think they know and what the data actually shows is wider than you might expect. See how your peers are managing costs today and where the industry still has room to improve.
Read More →
Hybrids: Electrification Without the Challenges
For fleet managers, fuel is one of the biggest line items in the budget — and it's one hybrids can shrink without changing how your people work. Download the eBook to see the numbers, understand the technology, and get a step-by-step guide to making the switch.
Read More →
Startup ZMD Motors Developing Electric Conversion for Ram 5500 Work Trucks
Detroit-based company says it has begun early development of a system to convert internal combustion Ram 5500 chassis-cab trucks to electric power.
Read More →
U.S. EV Adoption Is Climbing, but Commercial and Passenger Markets Diverge
New industry group data revealed that light-duty electric vehicle sales are hitting record market share and volumes, while commercial EV volume dipped. What’s driving the fluctuations?
Read More →
How To Upfit Electric Work Trucks and Vans
The biggest challenge lies in balancing additional equipment and accessories with EV battery capacity and range.
Read More →
How Fleets Can Adjust Approaches To EV Adoption
With the expiration of federal incentives, EV success now hinges less on government policy and more on discounts, battery tech progress, increased range, and broader infrastructure.
Read More →
Despite World Troubles, Forward Thinking Guides Fleets
Fleet operators shared their challenges during an annual conference that embraced the latest advances across all aspects of running private- and public-sector vehicles.
Read More →
GM Energy Details Partnerships and Targets for Public Charging Build-Out
EVgo, Pilot, ChargePoint and IONNA named; goal is 35k GM-invested DC stalls by 2030, with customer-experience upgrades at sites.
Read More →