by Ron Kotrba (School Bus Fleet) For more than six decades, Cook-Illinois Corporation has been entrusted with the crucial task of transporting children to and from school.
And for more than 15 years, this family-owned and operated school-bus contractor, among the largest in the nation, has relied on clean-burning biodiesel fuel to ensure the dependable and secure transportation of students while promoting a cleaner environment both within and outside its buses.
Today, 60% of the children transported by Cook-Illinois Corporation’s 2,200 buses under its 18 subsidiaries have special needs, including physical disabilities, learning disorders, autism, and “everything in between,” says John Benish Jr., president and chief operating officer. His late father, John Benish Sr., founded the company 65 years ago.
Since he was a teen, Benish has been immersed in the family business. He came into his own years later with groundbreaking innovations like pioneering Cook-Illinois Corporation’s moves into green transportation. Under Benish’s leadership, the company was the first in Illinois to voluntarily switch an entire bus fleet to biodiesel fuel.
Biodiesel is a low-carbon renewable fuel made from organic materials, wastes and residues like used cooking oil, animal fats, and excess soybean oil. It is six times less toxic than table salt and, in its pure form, can cut CO2 emissions by more than 85% while reducing carcinogenic particulate matter—black soot—by nearly 50%, in addition to lowering many other tailpipe emissions.
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All of Cook-Illinois Corporation’s diesel buses use some amount of biodiesel, whether that’s 11% (B11), 20% (B20) or, in some cases, 100% (B100).
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Cook-Illinois Corporation has 11 fueling sites throughout its network and uses biodiesel at each. The company’s bus fleet logs approximately 25 million miles a year, according to Benish. On average, Cook-Illinois Corporation uses between 1.5 million and 2 million gallons of blended biodiesel fuel every year.
Elevating Biodiesel: Cutting-Edge Green Initiatives
The latest innovation in Cook-Illinois Corporation’s long history with biodiesel is a project that began three years ago—trialing 100% biodiesel in a select number of buses.
Benish says the company first got involved with the B100 project with help from Bailey Arnold, program lead for the B20 Club of Illinois, through Cook-Illinois Corporation’s membership in the B20 Club.
The B20 Club recognizes a select group of Illinois-based organizations with strong commitments to run fleets on biodiesel blends of 20% or greater. Since 2014, B20 Club members have consumed more than 88.5 million gallons of B20 and higher biodiesel blends, contributing to cleaner air and more sustainable operations throughout Illinois.
Besides the B20 Club of Illinois, the Illinois Soybean Association and Cook-Illinois Corporation, the B100 project was made possible with participation from the nation’s largest biodiesel fuel producer, Chevron Renewable Energy Group, and Optimus Technologies.
Optimus Technologies is a Pittsburgh-based clean-energy startup and manufacturer of the Vector System, an advanced fuel-system technology that can upgrade any medium- or heavy-duty diesel engine to run on 100 percent biodiesel— even in harsh Midwestern winters.
The B100 project employs Optimus Technologies’ Vector System on five Thomas Built Buses, full-size school buses manufactured in North Carolina, through Cook-Illinois Corporation’s Kickert School Bus subsidiary.
“Cook-Illinois has been an exciting project for Optimus to work on,” says Colin Huwyler, CEO of Optimus Technologies. “This was our first time installing the Vector System on school buses. Bringing cleaner air that benefits the community and the environment is part of Optimus’ core mission. Reducing emissions for school buses that primarily run in neighborhoods with children and families is paramount to improving the health and safety of these communities.”
Benish says these buses work all day every day, and the B100 project was a success. “It involved some slight modifications to the buses, but they still use the same engines,” he explains. “We are happy with the project. For us, it’s just another attempt to use more biodiesel, and we are always looking for ways to improve.”
In fact, the pilot project went so well that Cook-Illinois Corporation is in the process of adding three additional units to its B100 fleet.
Comparing Biodiesel: A Green Alternative to Electric School Buses
Benish says the Kickert School Bus location, where the B100 project is housed, uses a variety of alternative fuels. In addition to B11 and B100, the site is equipped with a propane dispenser and a charging station for the company’s two electric buses.
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Benish says that although EVs likely will “be the future,” he conditions this by saying, “It will be a lot further in the future than people think. We think EVs will be the dominant vehicle 20 years from now, but in the meantime, school buses powered by fuels like biodiesel and propane are going to be needed to fill the gap.”
Benish points out that there are currently two big drawbacks with the early-stage, all-electric heavy-duty vehicles: range and expense. “We’re talking $90,000 for a new diesel-powered bus vs. $400,000 for an electric bus, plus the cost of a charging station, which is upwards of $20,000 apiece,” he says. “Even with all the incentives out there, the upfront cost of purchasing an electric school bus is still too high.”
Until the price of EVs come down and the range goes up, it will be up to alternative fuels like biodiesel—particularly B100—to significantly reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and cut harmful tailpipe emissions around and inside the bus, Benish points out.
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“We can get where we want to be very efficiently and economically by using biodiesel,” he says. “It’s a quick way to get green, and to run and operate a green fleet. We use it almost every day. I wouldn’t promote a product I didn’t stand by. If you use a product long enough, you figure out real quick what works and what doesn’t. We’re a private company and I’m one of the owners. It’s my money on the line, so we wouldn’t be using biodiesel if it didn’t make sense economically. Really, if you take the grant money out, it’s a lot easier to get a good economic story with biodiesel than with electric vehicles.”
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“Mechanics notice for sure,” Benish says. “We do our own engine rebuilds and our mechanics can see a big difference—they really notice the improvement.”
When the nation transitioned to ultra-low sulfur diesel in the 2000s, this helped reduce emissions but stripped lubricity from diesel fuel. Engine components need that lubricity to reduce wear and run properly.
“When we transitioned to biodiesel, it was nice because it added all that lost lubricity back into the fuel, and it’s higher in cetane,” Benish explains. “If you’re around diesel fuel all the time, then you’re familiar with the smoke and haze. We noticed a night-and-day difference using biodiesel. We just don’t have that haze anymore. When the buses are idling and waiting for children, the drivers and the students notice a big difference.”
For school districts or private bus contractors that are hesitant to make the switch, Benish advises them to just try it for six months.
“Talk to the people who are around it all the time, the drivers and mechanics,” he says. “They’ll see an immediate difference. Then tell the story—it’s not a story, but facts—about how it’s a renewable fuel that helps farmers and cleans up the environment in and around the bus, and other pluses like improving the safety and security for students. We are not ‘trying it’ anymore. We rely on the product. We don’t have to sell it—we just tell it. Biodiesel sells itself.” READ MORE
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