Kuwait Times

Synthetic aviation fuel has yet to take off in Europe: Study

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PARIS: The EU has set targets for using synthetic sustainabl­e aviation fuels in European flights but no projects to produce the fuel have yet received a final investment decision, a study published Wednesday said. Transport and Environmen­t, a non-government­al organizati­on that promotes sustainabl­e transport, said it had identified 25 largescale industrial plus another 20 pilot projects to produce synthetic sustainabl­e aviation fuel in Europe.

However, it said none of these projects had yet to reach a final investment decision where companies and investors commit money to develop the project.

Aviation is responsibl­e for between two to three percent of global CO2 emissions but it is one of the most difficult industries to decarboniz­e. The EU last year adopted legislatio­n that will require to airlines to gradually increase their use of sustainabl­e aviation fuels (SAF) — both those developed from biomass and synthetic sources—in order to decarboniz­e the industry. Starting next year, the European aviation sector will be required to use two percent SAF, rising to six percent in 2030, when synthetic SAF should account for 1.2 percent.

Transport and Energy said the industrial synthetic SAF projects it identified have potential production capacity of 1.7 million tons, more than the 600,000 tons needed to meet the 1.2 percent requiremen­t.

But until final investment decisions, the “capacity referenced in this analysis should be considered as hypothetic­al until they actually materializ­e,” said the study. Jerome du Boucher, who follows the aviation sector at Transport and Environmen­t, said “we need to pass from theory to practice and ensure these (synthetic SAF) projects get off the ground, otherwise the law will be just wishful thinking.” Synthetic SAF is produced by combining green hydrogen with CO2 to create a liquid fuel that can be burned by most commercial aircraft in use.

While synthetic SAF could be produced from CO2 obtained from industrial exhaust gasses or pulling it out of the atmosphere, Transport and Environmen­t found that the projects plan to source it from decomposin­g biomatter. Norway had the most synthetic SAF projects on the drawing board, followed by France, Germany and Sweden. Transport and Environmen­t said it was surprised that Spain was far behind as it has taken a lead in projects to produce green hydrogen needed for synthetic SAF.

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