SBF 70 years logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Cummins Developing Engine Platforms to Run on Alternative Fuels

Cummins says new internal combustion engines running on clean diesel, gasoline, natural gas, propane, and hydrogen will help fleets on the path to zero emissions.

Deborah Lockridge
Deborah LockridgeEditor and Associate Publisher
Read Deborah's Posts
February 14, 2022
Cummins Developing Engine Platforms to Run on Alternative Fuels

“Having a variety of lower carbon options is particularly important considering the variation in duty cycles and operating environments across the many markets we serve," explained Srikanth Padmanabhan, president, Cummins Engine Business.

Photo: Screen capture from virtual press conference

5 min to read


Cummins is pursuing a “fuel-agnostic” strategy to provide lower-carbon, alternative-fuel internal combustion engines in a way that makes it easier for fleets to meet sustainability goals on the path to full zero-emission drivetrains.

The company’s B, L and X-Series engine portfolios for medium- and heavy-duty vehicles will see the addition of versions that operate on fuels such as gasoline, natural gas, hydrogen, and propane. The new engines will use engine blocks and core components that share common architectures and will be optimized for different low-carbon fuel types. Each engine version will operate using a different, single fuel.

Ad Loading...

Calling climate change “the existential crisis of our time,” Srikanth Padmanabhan, president, Cummins Engine Business, said in a Feb. 14 press conference that “getting to zero is not a light-switch event. Carbon emissions that we put into the atmosphere today cannot be taken back. This means anything we can do to start reducing the carbon footprint today is a win for the planet.

“We know our planet cannot wait for the perfect solution.”

These new fuel-agnostic engine platforms will feature a series of engine versions that are derived from a common base engine, which means they have a high degree of parts commonality — 80%. Below the head gasket of each engine will largely have similar components. Above the head gasket will have different components for different fuel types.

The parts commonality will make it easier for fleets to add these alternative-fuel engines into their operations and for vehicle manufacturers to integrate into their production lines.

The parts commonality and the fact that these engines will look familiar to technicians will allow fleets to integrate alternative fuels into their operations without the steep learning curve that exists with battery-electric powertrains, said Jonathon White, vice president of engineering. “This makes them an economically viable, scalable, and eco-friendly solution that can be adopted today.

Ad Loading...

“This unique technology approach will allow end users to more seamlessly pick the right powertrain for their application with the lowest CO2 impact,” he said.

Below the head gasket of each engine will largely have similar components. Above the head gasket will have different components for different fuel types, explained Jonathon White, vice president of engineering.

Photo: Screen capture from virtual press conference

“Having a variety of lower-carbon options is particularly important considering the variation in duty cycles and operating environments across the many markets we serve," explained Padmanabhan. “There is no single solution or ‘magic bullet’ that will work for all application types or all end users.”

Cummins' Fuel-Agnostic Engine Platforms

The B6.7 line will be offered in clean diesel, natural gas, gasoline, propane, and hydrogen versions. The L9 and X15 lines will be available in clean diesel, natural gas, and hydrogen versions. Certain fuels may not be available in some states depending on emissions regulations.

Cummins' B6.7 line will be offered in clean diesel, natural gas, gasoline, propane, and hydrogen versions. The L9 and X15 lines will be available in clean diesel, natural gas, and hydrogen versions.

Photo: Screen capture from virtual press conference

The new engines will start rolling out in 2024. For the B platform, the first will be a gasoline engine. For the 15-liter, natural gas is the first, with clean diesel shortly afterward.

Already, Werner Enterprises is set to test the new natural gas and hydrogen ICE versions in its fleet.

Ad Loading...

Cummins officials pointed out that the company already added a natural-gas version of its X15 engine, making natural-gas engines an option for a wider range of applications. “We truly think the 15L can bring natural gas to the long-haul market and other duty cycles,” said Brett Merritt, VP, on-highway.

While the unified platform will feature compressed ignition for the diesel engines, all the others will use spark ignition, to provide as many commonalities as possible between engines.

The new approach may even allow Cummins to offer a gasoline version for heavier pickup trucks that currently need diesel engines for the durability and performance those engines bring, Padmanahban said.

The up-front cost of the new "fuel-agnostic" engines will be much lower than moving to fully electric or fuel cell options, said Amy Boerger, vice president, North American On Highway, lowering the barrier to entry. "The architecture and footprint will be similar across current platforms so will be easier for OEMs to integrate.”

Asked for more detail about how much more these engines will be than current diesel technology, Merritt said that with stricter emissions regulations going into effect starting in 2024, gasoline and propane engines will be very similar to what we see today. Natural-gas engines currently command more of a premium, he said, but “our anticipation is that there is a point where that starts to come down,” as greater scale is achieved and the parts commonality allows efficiencies in production. Cummins expects hydrogen ICE engines to have a similar price premium as natural gas.

Ad Loading...

Padmanahban pointed out that as emissions regulations continue to tighten, diesel engines will need more complex aftertreatment, driving up cost and complexity. Natural gas, however, will not, and hydrogen is expected to be the same. “The lower the CO2 footprint (of the fuel) is, the less we need to clean. As long as you have less to clean up, there’s going to be less aftertreatment.”

Beyond the engines, Merritt pointed out that Cummins is also working on advancing the fuel systems used, referencing its recent 50% equity interest in Momentum Fuel Technologies from Rush Enterprises, “so the truck is truly made in an integrated fashion to address the larger market, not just the niche market we see currently.”

Destination Zero

These new products are part of Cummins’ “destination zero” strategy to reach net-zero emissions by 2050. Cummins is committed to developing battery-electric and hydrogen-fuel-cell powertrains, but right now, most fleets can’t quickly transition to zero-emissions technology.

Padmanabhan said Cummins sees these lower-carbon-fuel internal-combustion engines as a transitionary technology to full battery-electric and fuel-cell-electric vehicles.

When asked about the pros and cons of hydrogen internal-combustion engines vs. fuel-cell electric, Padmanahban said, “It’s just a question of time. Fuel-cell electric eventually will be the technology. But today if you have a diesel engine and can just substitute components like the ignition system, the cost for that is going to be significantly lower than a FCEV powertrain would be. It’s going to take a while before FCEV is ready… so this is what I would call for the next 15 years or so a good transition technology.”

Ad Loading...

He pointed out that the hydrogen engines will use the same tanks as is being used for Cummins’ natural-gas engines.

Company officials also acknowledged that along with new products, there needs to be change in the energy sources that power them. When you look at “wheel-to-well” emissions, battery-electric vehicles may not be a cleaner choice if the electricity is being generated by coal-fired power plants. Most hydrogen currently produced is “gray” hydrogen, a process that creates CO2 emissions.

“There is a lot of work on green hydrogen that we need to do,” Padmanahban said. Green hydrogen makes up only 1% of hydrogen production today.

Originally posted on Heavy Duty Trucking

More Alternative Fuels

An orange and yellow graphic with a black and white image of the back end of an electric bus next to charging infrastructure and text reading "Alt-Fuel Moves: Fleets Power Up Beyond the Bus."
Alternative Fuelsby Elora HaynesJune 12, 2026

Alt-Fuel Moves: Fleets Power Up Beyond the Bus

See how districts are pairing electric buses with charging, solar, and V2G technology to cut costs, boost resilience, and unlock new fleet value.

Read More →
Graphic showing a winding road and directional signpost labeled “electric,” “propane,” “biofuels,” and “natural gas” beneath the headline “Where Is EPA Funding Headed?” with School Bus Fleet logo.
Alternative FuelsJune 11, 2026

What the EPA’s Updated Clean School Bus Program Means for Fleet Electrification in 2026 and Beyond

A guide to the EPA’s evolving school bus grants, including how the Trump administration changed funding priorities and how school districts can prepare for future bus purchases.

Read More →
Billy Murphy of Power Innovations International speaks at ACT Expo in front of a display featuring EV charging equipment and a Blue Bird school bus graphic. A text overlay reads “Simplified EV Charging.”
Alternative Fuelsby Amanda HuggettJune 3, 2026

A Solution Helping School Buses Charge Without Major Infrastructure Upgrades

Power Innovations International dishes on its EV charging technology designed to reduce infrastructure barriers, improve reliability, and support V2G applications for school bus fleets.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Promotional graphic announcing New Eagle's OpenECU platform. A blue electronic control unit (ECU) is featured against an orange background with EV charging stations and charging cables. The image includes the New Eagle and OpenECU logos, a "New Product" label, and School Bus Fleet branding.
Alternative FuelsJune 2, 2026

New Eagle Launches All-in-One EV Control Platform

The new OpenECU NX3 platform integrates charging and vehicle controls into a single platform, with support for megawatt charging and vehicle-to-grid technologies.

Read More →
Children board a yellow electric school bus from Central Consolidated School District during snowfall, as an adult assists students at the bus entrance.

GreenPower Unveils New Heating Solution for Type A Bus

The all-electric bus manufacturer's new product aims to eliminate cold-cabin issues on its Nano BEAST zero-emission school buses operating in cold climates.

Read More →
An orange and yellow graphic with a black and white image of an electric bus charger and text reading "Alt-Fuel Moves: Fleets Plug In For the Long Haul."
Alternative Fuelsby Elora HaynesMay 22, 2026

Alt-Fuel Moves: Fleets Plug In for the Long Haul

School districts across the U.S. are moving electric school bus plans into operation, with new fleet deployments, charging infrastructure, and long-term electrification partnerships taking shape.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Thumbnail graphic for a School Bus Fleet interview at ACT Expo featuring a smiling BetterFleet executive seated in front of a fleet technology booth display. Overlay text reads “BetterFleet” and “The G Problem in V2G.”
Alternative Fuelsby Amanda HuggettMay 22, 2026

The Achilles Heel of School Bus Electrification: BetterFleet’s Take

BetterFleet’s managing partner discusses AI-powered EV fleet management, vehicle-to-grid challenges, and the real challenges in bus electrification today, from ACT Expo.

Read More →
A red, black, and white graphic with text reading "The Fuel Decision is Yours."
Alternative FuelsMay 20, 2026

You're On Your Own to Pick a Drivetrain [Op-Ed]

After years of federal pressure toward electric school buses, districts are suddenly being told to choose their own path. Let’s explore the risks, realities, and politics behind school bus drivetrain decisions.

Read More →
Mark Childers of Thomas Built Buses stands in front of a large yellow electric school bus at ACT Expo while discussing the company’s new Type D EV school bus platform. Overlay text reads “The Big New EV School Bus” with School Bus Fleet at ACT Expo branding.
Alternative Fuelsby Amanda HuggettMay 19, 2026

Wattson: Thomas Built’s Largest EV School Bus Yet

Check in with Mark Childers on the new Wattson Type D electric school bus, featuring faster charging, expanded passenger capacity, and advanced safety technology.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Russell Vare of The Mobility House sits at the company’s ACT Expo booth discussing vehicle-to-grid technology and smart EV charging for school bus fleets. Overlay text reads “V2G Goes Mainstream” alongside School Bus Fleet at ACT Expo branding.
Alternative Fuelsby Amanda HuggettMay 15, 2026

The New Era of Electric School Buses: V2G, Bidirectional Chargers & More

The Mobility House discusses AI-powered charging, vehicle-to-grid technology, smart energy management, and the next phase of school bus electrification.

Read More →