986 ArchivesGreat American Road Trip has almost always been fueled by gasoline.
But soon it will be possible to traverse the United States in vehicles running on electricity, hydrogen and other cleaner fuels.
The Obama administration on Thursday unveiled 55 new highway corridors spanning 85,000 miles that indicate where drivers can stop to charge their electric cars or fill their tanks with compressed natural gas.
New interactive maps and highway road signs are designed to help drivers of cleaner cars leave their neighborhoods and travel longer distances, according to the Department of Transportation's Federal Highway Administration (FWHA).
Along with higher costs, a major reason more Americans haven't traded in their gas guzzlers is the lack of refueling options for alternative vehicles. If you can only afford one car, why would you pick the one that might not make it on the interstate?
The U.S. has roughly 153,000 gas stations scattered across the country, but only about 16,000 public electric charging stations and roughly 6,000 stations for natural gas, hydrogen or biodiesel.
"Many drivers of alternative-fuel or zero-emission vehicles may not currently know where they can drive their vehicles outside of urban areas, for fear they won’t be able to find the right kind of fueling station," Federal Highway Administrator Gregory Nadeau told Mashable.
Yet energy companies are steadily installing more alternative fueling stations to meet the growing demand for alternative cars. Tesla Motors, for instance, has installed its own network of more than 730 battery charging stations across North America, Europe and parts of Asia.
Under the Obama administration, U.S. state and federal agencies have awarded billions of dollars in grants and loans to help build fueling networks and reduce U.S. greenhouse gas emissions from transportation.
"By making it easier for such drivers to use the interstate system, this network of alternative fuel corridors will empower a growing segment of the driving public," Nadeau said in an email.
The FHWA-designated corridors mark the routes where electric and alternative fueling stations are available every 50 miles. The stations must also be located within 5 miles of the designated route.
On the new maps, green lines indicate where fueling stations are currently available. Brown dashes show where stations will go up within weeks or a few months.
The agency also designed blue road signs for states to install along the routes, similar to the road signs that alert drivers to upcoming rest stops or restaurants.
"Alternative fuels and electric vehicles will play an integral part in the future of America’s transportation system,” U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx said in a statement.
"We have a duty to help drivers identify routes that will help them refuel and recharge those vehicles, and designating these corridors on our highways is a first step," he said.
Hate United all you want but trashing its app accomplishes nothingSlack finally catches up to AOL Instant Messenger'Fantastic Beasts' casts Young DumbledoreHuawei's CEO trashed smartwatches even though his company makes themPsychedelic shrimp with tons of sonic energy named after Pink FloydJust let this pizza covered in tacos and guacamole happenThe world looks stunning in new photographs released by NASAHarrison Ford schooled George Lucas on how he got the Han Solo roleNeil deGrasse Tyson tried his hand at naming Beyoncé's twinsThis guy built his own iPhone by buying parts in ChinaChill, parents. Amazon's new dashboard will let you see the content your kids are consuming.How to manage iMessage on multiple devicesThere's a touching story behind the Princess Diana memorial gardenA Buffett family foundation will devote $90 million to supporting girls of colorA scorpion stung a man on a United Airlines flight, because United AirlinesEllen DeGeneres isn't about to let that chicken nuggets teen steal her Twitter recordFacebook blasted again for not quickly removing child pornMotorcyclist takes global adventure after exWho run the galaxy? Star Wars women get their own cartoon series and toys.Guy builds a thrill ride that spins faster if you aren't scared enough American Refugee by Venita Blackburn What Is the Word for Sky? by Nina MacLaughlin Dance Time, across the Diaspora by Nadia Owusu Let It Burn by Robert Jones, Jr. Redux: Nor Staple Down to Fact by The Paris Review Redux: A Aries, T Taurus, G Gemini by The Paris Review Redux: Thunder, They Told Her by The Paris Review Staff Picks: Dictators, Deep Souls, and Doom by The Paris Review The Crisis Cliché by Hermione Hoby Staff Picks: Punctures, Punishers, and Podcasts by The Paris Review The Edge of the Map by Colin Dickey The Archive by Melissa Chadburn Redux: When They Could Have Been Anything by The Paris Review Staff Picks: Professors, Paychecks, and Poetry by The Paris Review The Art of Distance No. 17 by The Paris Review The Waiting Game by Hannah Ewens The Art of Distance No. 11 by The Paris Review The Sky Is Blue with a Single Cloud by Kuniko Tsurita Cooking with Steve Abbott by Valerie Stivers On Translationese by Masatsugu Ono
2.0655s , 10134.578125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【1986 Archives】,Unobstructed Information Network