The Chelan County (Wash.) Public Utility District is considering making the switch to renewable biodiesel to fuel its fleet.
Roselynne Reyes・Senior Editor
August 12, 2016
Photo courtesy of Chelan County.
2 min to read
Photo courtesy of Chelan County.
The Chelan County (Wash.) Public Utility District is considering making the switch to renewable diesel to fuel its fleet. Craig Weddle, supply chain and fleet manager, said the district has tested renewable diesel on about 40 vehicles from its line department — including boom trucks, digger derricks, and line foreman trucks — for about three months.
The district has used 20,000 gallons of renewable diesel so far and recently purchased another 10,000 gallons to continue the pilot program. It plans to decide this Fall whether it will adopt the fuel. The City of Wenatchee and two county fire districts also use the PUD's fueling facilities and would convert to renewable diesel if the decision is made.
Ad Loading...
Chelan County PUD maintains a fleet of about 840 assets, including 310 road vehicles. About half of the district's fleet would switch over to renewable diesel, and fleet emissions are expected to decrease from 3.3 million pounds of carbon emissions per year to 1 million pounds.
But Weddle said the utility district is still considering all options and plans to take a cautious approach. Concerns in making the switch include the limited production of renewable diesel in the U.S. and global concerns related to using palm oil in renewable diesel production.
Weddle said his district began looking at biofuel options in preparation for a Washington state law that requires all publicly owned vessels, vehicles, and construction equipment to be fueled by electricity or biofuel by June 2018.
Streamlight has launched its Portable Scene Light III (PSL III), which delivers up to 10,000 lumens, and the LiteBox 1Million, a long-range search light that delivers one million candela.
EUFMC 2026 registration has surpassed last year’s fleet registration record, and the event will deliver a variety of topics during its educational program, Driving Safety, Sustainability & Technical Expertise.
Work Truck visited with Ismael Daneluz, vice president of sales and service for PALFINGER North America, to discuss where the company is headed in 2026. In this video, he discusses new products and a strategic growth outlook.
AI-powered inspections are transforming last-mile fleets by replacing manual checks with highly accurate automated scans that detect defects in seconds. By giving fleet operations visibility into the daily condition of their vehicles, you can identify trends over the vehicle’s lifecycle that enable improved procurement decisions, route management, driver training and accountability.
DICA’s new Ranger HD, Defender MD, and Titan mat systems deliver scalable, high-performance ground protection solutions. All are being exhibited this week at CONEXPO 2026.
Through a new partnership, Huddig customers in the United States will gain access to an expanded sales, service and aftermarket infrastructure, leveraging Terex Services’ branch locations.
Still managing your motor pool with spreadsheets and manual approvals? Loyola University replaced outdated processes with automated fleet management, eliminating overtime and saving up to $50,000 annually. See how they did it.
48% of field service leaders are investing in AI to manage customer communication and self-service. Get the latest on how fleets are using AI and thinking about the future.
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.