Standing route out of the Roger Street HQ — diesel, propane, lubricants, and DEF to the cities, to the Wellesley/Woolwich townships, and to the Mennonite belt north of the urban core.
The same standing route serves the urban cardlock fleet, the rural farms, and the homes outside the gas grid.
Petro-Pass cardlock at 155 Roger Street, plus on-site refuelling for yards and multi-site fleets across the Region.
Coloured diesel and propane for the cash-crop and livestock farms in Woolwich, Wellesley, Wilmot, and North Dumfries.
Propane and furnace oil for rural homes outside the Enbridge gas grid — the four townships and the village pockets between them.
Waterloo Region is two markets at once: the cities run on Enbridge gas, but the townships of Woolwich, Wellesley, Wilmot and North Dumfries are oil and propane country — and Old Order Mennonite farms across St. Jacobs, Elmira, Linwood and Heidelberg depend on propane for water heating, milk-house sanitation and barn ventilation.
The Region’s 1,409 farms work 210,055 acres, with 22.5% generating renewable energy on-site. Our HQ at 155 Roger Street sits in downtown Waterloo — the standing route runs from there into the four townships and back, by named rep, year-round.
The standing route includes the two other cities in the Region and the surrounding townships.
The traffic volumes, the crossing counts, and the cardlock network that runs along it. Waterloo HQ sits at the eastern end of this corridor.
The bright-line eligibility rules, the penalty ladder, and the on-farm storage requirements that apply to every farm in the Region.
The federal carbon charge on propane was set to zero in April 2025 — what changed on residential invoices in Wellesley and Woolwich.
A named rep takes the call — diesel, propane, lubricants, DEF on one invoice, one route.
Standing routes across nine regions. Same rep year-round; off-hours emergency dispatch through the same number.
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