Atlas Core Accelerates Nigeria’s Clean Energy Transition with Fleet Conversion Initiative

Dike Onwuamaeze

Atlas Core Energy and Logistics (ACEL) is targeting high-density logistics hubs and urban transport systems with its recently launched Fleet Conversion and Clean Mobility Strategy (FCCMS).

The initiative would enable wide-scale transition of fleet operators from fossil fuel to cleaner alternatives such as compressed natural gas (CNG), electric, and hybrid technologies.

The Chief Executive Officer of ACEL, Owoade Emmanuel, said that “the time for slogans is over and it is time to build the systems that power change,.”

Emmanuel, who is a UK-trained researcher and energy strategist, said that “Nigeria’s logistics and energy sectors are intertwined, and if we’re serious about sustainability, we must drive infrastructure that supports this shift.”

The newly unveiled program will deploy CNG conversion hubs and service centers across major Nigerian corridors and partner with fleet operators and logistics firms to ensure economic viability and performance efficiency.

It would also drive collaborative innovation with policymakers and technology developers.

“This launch is part of Atlas Core’s broader vision to become a strategic player in Nigeria’s clean energy ecosystem — not just participating in the conversation, but building the backbone of the transformation,” Emmanuel said.
He said that ACEL is founded in response to Nigeria’s critical energy and infrastructure gaps and is focused on sustainable, scalable systems that integrate clean mobility, renewable energy, and logistics innovation.

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