Alaska Dispatch by Amanda Coyne.  … Propane has the potential to do more than just power your Todd Mouw, Roush CleanTech, Propane, Dave Harbour, Alaska, North Slope Gas, ANGDAoutdoor grill. It can heat Alaska homes, cook Alaskan meals and even fuel Alaskan vehicles, thanks to advances in technology. A company called ROUSCH CleanTech (NGP Photo with Roush executive, Todd Mouw) has delivered a propane fuel-injected carburetor that works even in the coldest North Slope temperatures. And ANGDA has decided to partner up with ROUSH.  Propane-powered vehicles could Harold Heinze, Dave Harbour, ANGDA, Alaska North Slope Propane, ARCO, Bob Stinsonsave Alaskans money while making Alaska air even cleaner. Turns out propane is kind of a wonder fuel. Though it isn’t a true renewable, propane costs about a third of unleaded gasoline or diesel, has about a third fewer greenhouse gas emissions and, if nothing else, could serve as a "bridge" fuel until renewable fuels are financially viable.  And because propane comes with natural gas, we’ve got a lot of that bridge fuel. Every day, the producers re-inject between 50,000 and 80,000 barrels of propane back into Alaska’s North Slope oil wells.  "We have a bounty of propane on the slope," said Harold Heinze (NGP Photo, with Bob Stinson in background, at last week’s Propane Conference), the head of ANGDA. "But we’re bringing it in from Canada at a much higher price than we should be paying."