Heavy Duty Trucking Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

IdleAir Looks to Set Up Locations at Fleet Terminals

After working to revitalize the network of the truckstop electrification service provider IdleAir since purchasing it three years year ago, Convoy Solutions is turning its attention toward truck fleets as customers -- but in a new way, with what it calls dedicated terminal solutions.

Evan Lockridge
Evan LockridgeFormer Business Contributing Editor
June 12, 2013
IdleAir Looks to Set Up Locations at Fleet Terminals

IdleAir's traditional drop-down units provide HVAC, electricity, Internet and other functions.

5 min to read


IdleAir's traditional drop-down units provide HVAC, electricity, Internet and other functions.

After working to revitalize the network of the truckstop electrification service provider IdleAir since purchasing it three years year ago, Convoy Solutions is turning its attention toward truck fleets as customers -- but in a new way, with what it calls dedicated terminal solutions.

Ad Loading...

“Our main goal is we think we can provide the lowest cost and most reliable solution for idling mitigation for fleets on their own real estate,” says Ethan Garber, CEO of Convoy Solutions.

Ad Loading...

The idea is simple: Offer the same service at fleet facilities that IdleAir has a its 34 truckstop locations as of mid-May, including electrical connections, in-cab heating or cooling, along with TV and Internet access, without having to idle a truck. The company says in addition to saving fuel wasted on idling, carriers enjoy long-term savings by extending engine life and reducing wear and tear on diesel and battery auxiliary power units, including getting electric recharging for battery systems.

“We’ve discovered a very good dynamic between us and dedicated fleet terminals,” Garber says. “What we are offering, for a limited time, is to put in installations at our cost, and that we will cover the electric costs and provide the service at our national network at our fleet rates.”

Garber says for the first nine months of asking fleets to consider dedicated terminal solutions it got very little traction, but that has changed.

“Now suddenly as summer is coming, air conditioning and idling risk and costs are coming to the forefront for a lot of fleets and fuel managers and that maybe this Idleair option is not such a bad idea.”

The IdleAir unit that fits in a truck's window.

The reason for such a different approach is that for some fleets IdleAir’s network of truckstop locations may not fit into their footprint, even with 50 sites planned by the end of this year and 100 by the end of 2015 at truckstops. At the same time many fleets don’t have much in the way of an idling alternative. Maybe their application is too weight-sensitive to add an auxiliary power unit, for instance.

Ad Loading...

Dedicated fleet terminal setups, says Garber, bridge this divide.

“[Some] fleets want to keep their drivers close and would rather have them in the terminal. Some fleets even do their fueling on their terminal and want to keep everything close to home,” Garber says. “Other are just worried about their equipment being on the road and having an incentive for driver to be closer for maintenance and safety. Suddenly [by having IdleAir] it makes the terminal a draw rather than something drivers want to avoid.”

Currently IdleAir has one active fleet terminal, but expects to have six open by the end of summer. Unlike putting in IdleAir facilities at truckstops, which takes months, installations at fleet facilities can just between two to three weeks.

What About Shorepower?

IdleAir being used in the cab.

If IdleAir was the buzzword for the previous decade when it came to idling alternatives for trucks, especially when the company was rapidly expending and had more than a hundred locations under the now defunct previous owner, shorepower and the company Shorepower Technologies is likely the one for the second decade.

While Shorepower has been busy rolling out its service to more than 50 locations, Garber says there is one big difference between shore power and what IdleAir offers.

Ad Loading...

“Right now we know that 95% of all trucks either have an APU or can’t use straight shore power," Garber says. “We don’t think there is a huge amount of demand for [shore power alone].”

Nevertheless, IdleAir appears to be hedging its bets and may open up a couple of parallel site this summer that offer shore power only. He says it’s important to remember that IdleAir has been offering shore power since day one.

Earlier this year IdleAir began offering what it calls Convoy TV+Power, allowing truckers to access its DirecTV service offerings along with electrical power for less than the hourly cost of its full slate of services.

When it comes to one of the latest idling alternatives, electrical connections for reefers, Garber says IdleAir is making plans, especially for dedicated fleet terminals, either as a pedestal or a dropdown connection, but adds he doesn’t seem demand for this springing up overnight because so few reefers have this option.

“We are not going to spearhead large refrigerated fleets transitioning their trailer to have the hybrid option. They are going to need a lot more choices than just us,” he says.

Ad Loading...

Long Term Future

Despite all the excitement when IdleAir launched more than 10 years ago (under the name IdleAire) critics said the service wouldn’t be around for long. And indeed, there were huge financial losses. The company has changed hands three times, but Convoy Solutions, with its limited network, also seems to be more conservative than the previous two efforts. It seems to be paying off.

“After three years we are not net income positive yet, but are income positive for some locations.” Garber says. “We have cut overheard 80%-90%. We have less than 80 employees when our predecessor had 1,400.”

One likely reason is that Garber and the rest of the investors are “turnaround experts,” in other words taking broken business and fixing them up. IdleAir is the only business owned by Convoy Solutions. When IdleAir relaunched in the fall of 2010 and shortened its name, it began with just 10 locations and shortly was up to 20. Unfortunately, Garber says, “Ten of those 20 were some of the worst sites of the old company -- they had the least amount of general traffic and were very challenging for the old company to run, and it was just as challenging for us.”

Today the company, in addition to embarking on dedicated terminal solutions, is right-sizing IdleAir’s footprint to actual demand and truckstop parking lot conditions. This new strategy just may work.

“We are twice as profitable [for a truckstop] as selling diesel, so there is at least one important ingredient why a travel center would have us, is that we can make them more money,” he says. “But we are 10 times more profitable for a fleet terminal, because we are paying the travel center essentially 30 cents per hour but we are saving a fleet $3 an hour.”

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Drivers

Illustration of Department of Labor building, diesel technician at a computer, and driver training semi trailer
Driversby Deborah LockridgeMarch 10, 2026

Federal Proposal Would Allow Pell Grants for Shorter-Term Job Training

The Department of Labor plans to expand Pell Grant eligibility to some shorter workforce training programs, a move the American Trucking Associations said will help strengthen commercial driver training schools and diesel technician training programs.

Read More →
Illustration of truck owner operator and magnifying glass with the word "regulations"
Driversby Deborah LockridgeFebruary 26, 2026

Owner-Operator Model Gets Boost as DOL Proposes 2024 Independent Contractor Definition Reversal

For an industry that has watched this issue go back and forth for years, the independent contractor proposal marks the latest swing in the regulatory pendulum.

Read More →
 Truck with door open and enforcement officer talking to driver about ELD
DriversFebruary 26, 2026

FMCSA Reinstates Field Warrior ELD to Registered Device List

One electronic logging device has been reinstated to the FMCSA's list of registered ELDs.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Photo of truck driver in yellow safety vest walking alongside tractor-trailer
Driversby Deborah LockridgeFebruary 25, 2026

How One Company is Using Smart Suspension Technology to Reduce Driver Injuries and Improve Retention

America’s Service Line adopted Link’s SmartValve and ROI Cabmate systems to address whole-body vibration, repetitive strain, and driver turnover. The trucking fleet is already seeing measurable results.

Read More →
Illustration with photos from some of the 2026 Best Fleets to Drive For honorees
Driversby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 24, 2026

CarriersEdge Announces 2026 Best Fleets to Drive For

The 18th annual contest recognizing the best workplaces for truck drivers sees changes to Top 20, Hall of Fame

Read More →
Illustration of driver students around trucks with distressed graphic elements and safety cones
Driversby Deborah LockridgeFebruary 19, 2026

FMCSA Targets 550+ ‘Sham’ CDL Schools in Nationwide Sting Operation

The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration issued more than 550 notices of proposed removal to commercial driver training providers following a five-day nationwide enforcement sweep. Investigators cited unqualified instructors, improper training vehicles, and failure to meet federal and state requirements.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
 Illustration showing a driver behind the wheel, DOT offices, and examples of problematic non domiciled CDL
Driversby Deborah LockridgeFebruary 18, 2026

DOT Alleges Illinois Issued Illegal Non-Domiciled CDLs

Illinois is the latest state targeted and threatened with the loss of highway funding by the U.S. Department of Transportation in its review of states' non-domiciled CDL issuance procedures. The state is pushing back.

Read More →
 Illustration showing a driver behind the wheel, DOT offices, and examples of problematic non domiciled CDL
Driversby Deborah LockridgeFebruary 12, 2026

FMCSA Locks in Non-Domiciled CDL Restrictions

After a legal pause last fall, FMCSA has finalized its rule limiting non-domiciled commercial driver's licenses. The agency says the change closes a safety gap, and its revised economic analysis suggests workforce effects will be more gradual than first thought.

Read More →
Photo of Stone's Truck Stop
Driversby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 5, 2026

Trucker Path Names Top Truck Stops for 2026

Truck driver ratings reveal the best chain and independent truck stops in the country.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
SponsoredFebruary 1, 2026

6 Dashcam Tactics to Improve Safety & ROI

6 intelligent dashcam tactics to improve safety and boost ROI

Read More →