Professor Carr.
 
Congratulations on the subtle but excellent wake up call 
that you issued as part of the article that was published originally in the 
Wheeling Register, and published today in the Charleston Daily Mail.  Your 
comments, as reported, are right on.  Natural gas is abundant, relatively 
less expensive than either gasoline or diesel fuel, and better for the 
environment and the engines...the only caveat is the cost of the delivery 
system.  
 
There is also an underplayed benefit to compressed 
natural gas (CNG).  It is the cleanest of the fossil fuels, and until we 
get to an all solar, wind, geothermal and hydrogen economy, it appears to be the 
most economical fuel for BOTH transportation and power generation.  (The 
recent analysis by Harvard's School of Public Health certainly shed yet another 
light on the true economics or coal fired power that would, if the real costs 
were borne by coal, make natural gas the cheapest fuel for power generation 
as well.  But that's another topic.)       
 
 
I am attaching an op-ed that I wrote and was 
printed in the Charleston Gazette in 2009 when it was announced 
that the KRT here in Kanawha County was buying hybrid diesel busses.  It 
spells out my background, experience and posture with regard to CNG as a fuel, 
particularly for dedicated diesel bus and truck fleets.
 
What can we do collectively to start, foster, incite or 
encourage an acceleration of a transition to CNG?  We all have unique 
perspectives and experience that should get policy maker's attention.  
Probably too late for this Legislative session, but it takes time to educate the 
legislators...so I invite your ideas as to how we can bring about 
change in thinking.  Surely the Legislators who will profit from the 
Marcellus Shale gas will be interested.
 
I am copying three other WVU professors that I 
know.  Dr. Atkinson and I just met last week at the ARPA-E Energy Summit in 
D.C.  His specialty is engine design.   
 
Dr. Carl Irwin of the Industries of the Future Office is 
an old friend who has been a wise counselor to me as I build a manufacturing 
business that will reduce the carbon footprint of every Boeing and Airbus 
aircraft.  He too was at the ARPA-E Energy Summit.
 
Dr. Kotcon has been quite active in environmental 
matters in the State, and always offers stimulating and knowledgeable thoughts 
about cleaning up our energy infrastructure and advocating 
conservation.
 
And while there are serious environmental issues 
surrounding the extraction of the Marcellus Shale natural gas, I am sure that 
environmentally sound practices will eventually be in place that will enable 
this State to benefit from its vast potential.
 
Getting the State's fleet of school busses BACK on 
CNG,  and all the other diesel engines as well, will surely help the budget 
shortfall, clean up the air and switch our fuel acquisition sources from 
those that hate us to our own shores...indeed our own neighbors in this 
State.
 
I look forward to hearing your good 
thoughts...
 
Allan Tweddle, CEO & Chairman
Composite Transport Technologies Inc.
Charleston WV
 
p.s. My company does not have ANY vested direct 
financial interest in these ideas...I am just an engineer with 50 years of 
experience in environmental matters and a very concerned grandfather and 
taxpayer...