Comparative Review of Natural Gas Vehicles During the Energy Transition
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Overview of Natural Gas Vehicles
3. Comparative Assessment of Environmental Indicators
3.1. NOx and Particulate Emissions
3.2. CO2 Emissions
4. Discussion
4.1. Economic Implications
4.2. Infrastructure Implications
4.3. Emission Implications
4.4. Other Transitional Pathways
4.5. Public Perception and Barriers to NGV Adoption
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Fuel Type | Engine Specifications | Comments |
---|---|---|
CNG (compressed natural gas) | Spark-ignition combustion, similar to petrol engines | CNG is stored in tank and transferred to the engine through a pressure regulator to adjust pressure. Fuel is combined with air, and the air/fuel mixture is ignited by a spark from a spark plug. Some HDVs that use CNG have a diesel-like compression–injection system. |
LNG (liquefied natural gas) | Spark-ignition combustion, similar to petrol engines | The natural gas is super-cooled and cryogenically stored in liquid form, usually in a tank on the side of the truck. As it is stored as a liquid, the energy density of LNG is greater than CNG, so more fuel can be stored on board the vehicle, making it suitable for HDVs travelling long distances. The use of LNG is more complicated than CNG, and thus, it is only used in some HDVs to meet longer range requirements. |
Bi-fuel (petrol or CNG) | Spark-ignition combustion, similar to petrol engines | The vehicle can use either petrol or CNG in the same internal combustion engine. Both fuels are stored on board, and the driver can switch between the fuels. The vehicle is equipped with separate fuel tanks, fuel injection systems, and fuel lines for both fuels. |
Dual-fuel (CNG and diesel blend) | Internal combustion engine, similar to diesel engines | A blend of the fuels is used in order to assist ignition (even as low as 90% CNG, 10% diesel). This configuration is traditionally limited to HDVs. |
Country | Number of Fuelling Stations |
---|---|
China | 8400 |
Pakistan | 3416 |
Iran | 2400 |
Argentina | 2014 |
Brazil | 1805 |
India | 1424 |
Italy | 1219 |
Vehicle Type | Internal Combustion Engine | Battery Charging |
---|---|---|
Hybrid Electric Vehicle (HEV) | Yes | On-board (internal) |
Plug-In Electric Vehicle (PHEV) | Yes | On-board (internal) and/or external charging |
Full Electric Vehicle (or Battery Electric Vehicle, BEV) | No | External Charging |
Fuel Cell Electric Vehicle (FCEV) using H2 | No | On-board (internal) |
Vehicle Type | Regulated Emissions | Unregulated Emissions | Comments |
---|---|---|---|
LDV—Petrol | Carbon Monoxide (CO) = 1.0 g/km Nitrogen Oxides (NOx) = 0.06 g/km Total Hydrocarbons (HCs) = 0.10 g/km Particulate Matter (PM) = 0.005 g/km Particulate Number (PN) = 6 × 1011/km | Nitrous oxide (N2O), ammonia (NH3), and ultrafine particles (which may be partially regulated via PN, but smaller fractions are still of concern). | PM limits for gasoline are newer, primarily for direct injection engines. |
LDV—Diesel | CO = 0.50 g/km NOx = 0.08 g/km HC + NOx = 0.17 g/km PM = 0.005 g/km PN = 6 × 1011/km | N2O, NH3, Sulphur Dioxide (SO2) and ultrafine particles (which may be partially regulated via PN, but smaller fractions are still of concern). | Diesel vehicles have historically faced stricter PM limits. |
HDV—Diesel | CO = 4 g/km NOx = 0.46 g/km HC = 0.16 g/km PM = 0.01 g/km PN = 8 × 1011/km SO2 = 10 ppm NH3 = 0.0045 g/km | N2O, ultrafine particles (which may be partially regulated via PN, but smaller fractions are still of concern), metals (from engine wear/lube oil). | HDVs often have distinct and generally stricter limits because of their higher fuel consumption and mileage. They are also differentiated between steady-state and transient testing. Here, maximum values are given. |
EV | Hybrids: When operating via an internal combustion engine (ICE). Same as comparable petrol/diesel ICE vehicles (CO, NOx, PM, PN). | When operating via an ICE: same as comparable petrol/diesel ICE vehicles (NH3, N2O), SO2, ultrafine particles. | PHEVs have zero emissions when running purely on electricity. BEVs produce no tailpipe emissions. |
NGV | Same as comparable diesel/petrol vehicles (CO, NOx, PM, PN). | Same as comparable petrol/diesel ICE vehicles (NH3, N2O), SO2, ultrafine particles, CH4. | While not a direct tailpipe limit, methane slip due to uncombusted natural gas is an issue. |
Fuel | WTT CO2 Emissions (gCO2/MJfuel) |
---|---|
Petrol | 12.5 |
Diesel | 14.2 |
CNG | 8.4 |
CNG transported over 4000 km | 14.0 |
CNG transported over 7000 km | 21.7 |
NGVs | EVs | H2 FCEV | |
---|---|---|---|
Costs | Purchasing price of LDVs: EUR 2000 higher, MD/HDVs: 50% higher than its conventional vehicle price. Retrofitted engines on existing cars add around USD 6000–USD 13,000 to the price for LDVs [81] and USD 15,000 for HDVs. [22,82,83]. Running costs are seen to be lower because of lower fuel costs, even though they fluctuate [32,83]. Unexpected costs, including maintenance facility upgrades, technician training, fuelling facility maintenance, etc., come to the investor or government (if public-owned) [83]. | Purchasing price: The price of EVs is around 2–2.5 times higher than the price of conventional-fuelled vehicles [84]. Battery costs are the most significant parameter contributing to the higher prices of EVs, as well as maintenance costs [38]. Running costs can be lower because of the lower prices of electricity (depending on the source) and higher diesel/petrol prices due to taxation [84]. Also, fewer moving parts means less wear and tear (e.g., no oil and filter replacements), thus maintenance can be reduced to once per 40,000 km instead of around 6000 km [85]. | Highest purchasing costs in comparison to all the other examined vehicles. Purchasing price projected to fall between USD 20,000 and USD 25,000 in 2050 [85,86]. Running costs are higher because of the higher price of hydrogen [86]. |
CO2 Emission reductions | WTW: On average, 25% reductions [29]. WTT: Similar, but ultimately depends on the pathways followed by natural gas (CNG vs. LNG, transport distances, grid availability, etc.) [69,81]. TTW: Lower, as natural gas emits less CO2 [39,68,86]. | WTW: Depending on the vehicle, 0.5–0.8 times the conventional emissions [60,63,64,65]. WTT: Depend on the source of electricity; they can be close to conventional fuels when electricity is sourced from fossil fuels [38,59,68]. TTW: Significantly less even for hybrids (0.6–0.7 times the conventional) and zero for BEVs. | WTW: Less, as there are no TTW emissions; depend on the source of hydrogen [59]. WTT: Depending on the source of hydrogen, 0.4–0.7 times the conventional [59,63,66,68]. TTW: Zero. |
Infrastructure readiness | NGV refuelling stations can be costly (USD 1.2 to 1.8 million) [22,87,88], so modular additions to existing refuelling stations can allow for grid expansion. The existing natural grid can be leveraged to supply the refuelling stations. | EV infrastructure is rapidly evolving (55% increase from 2021 to 2022), but unevenly (China leads in the number of charging points) [89,90]. | Lack of robust refuelling network. Around 1160 stations worldwide, with Asia leading the deployment [91]. High capital costs of stations (~USD 1.9 million) [92] that vary with configuration and operation modes [93,94]. |
Maturity | Highly mature engine technology, especially for bi-/dual-fuel engines. | Highly mature engine technology. | Significantly less mature than NGVs and EVs. |
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Himona, E.; Poullikkas, A. Comparative Review of Natural Gas Vehicles During the Energy Transition. Energies 2025, 18, 3512. https://doi.org/10.3390/en18133512
Himona E, Poullikkas A. Comparative Review of Natural Gas Vehicles During the Energy Transition. Energies. 2025; 18(13):3512. https://doi.org/10.3390/en18133512
Chicago/Turabian StyleHimona, Eleni, and Andreas Poullikkas. 2025. "Comparative Review of Natural Gas Vehicles During the Energy Transition" Energies 18, no. 13: 3512. https://doi.org/10.3390/en18133512
APA StyleHimona, E., & Poullikkas, A. (2025). Comparative Review of Natural Gas Vehicles During the Energy Transition. Energies, 18(13), 3512. https://doi.org/10.3390/en18133512