Access Keys:

English

German

Italian

Portuguese

Spanish

Swedish

Danish

Dutch

Czech

Polish

Hungarian

Slovakian

Press releases

Groundbreaking biofuel bus trial

26 July 2007

Arriva Technician with a bus soon to be running on B20 fuel

Transport group Arriva is trialling B20 biodiesel for the first time on its buses.

Arriva is aiming to reduce total carbon emissions by around 14 per cent by using Fatty Acid Methyl Ester (FAME) as a 20 per cent blend.

The FAME will predominantly be a mixture of sustainable soya products, along with used cooking oil and tallow.

The 75 buses in the innovative trial will run from Arriva’s Blyth Garage in Northumberland and carry around 130,000 passengers every week. Minimal engineering changes will be required to the fleet as part of the scheme.

Mark Bowd, Arriva’s director of technical services, said: “We know that public transport has a massive role to play in the fight against global warming.

“This scheme not only shows that we take our environmental responsibility very seriously but it also reduces the carbon footprint of our passengers, many of whom already choose the bus rather than the car for this very reason.

“We will be asking the Government to review the tax arrangements to help the market make this fuel available at a more economic price than is currently possible”

Arriva is already trialling the world’s first hybrid double decker and piloting new technology which analyses driving behaviour to help substantially reduce exhaust emissions.

The B20 biodiesel has been produced by Teesside-based Petroplus. Iain Grime, the company’s business development manager, said: “This is the first time we have supplied B20 to a bus operator and we are confident that this will prove to be a very successful partnership.”

Arriva across
Europe

Find out more about Arriva across Europe


History
and growth

Find out about our history and growth in our Flash timeline


Factsheet