The New Zealand Herald

Biofuel to partly power Cathay Pacific Airbus delivery

- Grant Bradley

When a brand new Cathay Pacific Airbus A350-1000 flies from France to Hong Kong on Wednesday it will be partly powered by biofuel.

The 334-seat plane will have a 10 per cent blend of biofuel next to traditiona­l jet fuel in its tanks which can hold 156,000 litres.

During previous deliveries of an earlier model of the plane from Toulouse in the south of France, the airline has used a sugarcane-based biofuel from a Brazil. The use of biofuels has been supported by Airbus itself as well as fuel provider Total, which will be fuelling the A350-1000 on the day of its delivery.

Cathay Pacific has 20 of these technologi­cally advanced planes on order for delivery over the next four years.

Seven are due for delivery by the end of this year and will be used on long-haul flights linking to its Auckland and (in summer) its Christchur­ch operations, which use A350-900s.

The airline not only uses the sugarcane biofuel — which has powered cars for decades — but several years ago it took an equity stake in a United States firm that aims to make alternativ­e fuel from municipal waste for use on a commercial scale.

Cathay Pacific chief executive Rupert Hogg said the airline wanted to reduce the impact of greenhouse gas emissions.

“Achieving carbon-neutral growth from 2020 is an important target that we take seriously and using alternativ­e fuels is one of the key strategies in helping us to do so. We will continue to support the developmen­t and usage of biofuel to reach mainstream commercial viability.”

Cathay Pacific’s first Airbus A350-900 aircraft in 2016 flew the longest biofuel delivery flight at the time. Now 22 aircraft of this type have been delivered using a 10 per cent blend of alternativ­e jet fuel.

Compared with traditiona­l jet fuel, biofuel can cut life cycle greenhouse gas emissions by up to 80 per cent.

Cathay, in 2014, invested in US-based Fulcrum BioEnergy which has been running waste to energy trials for several years. Fulcrum broke ground on its first commercial-scale plant in Nevada last month, with operations due to begin by 2020.

When the factory is fully operationa­l, it will produce more than 37 million litres of fuel per year.

Fulcrum had run a trial plant in North Carolina to prove its technology, which uses extreme heat to break down municipal waste into basic elements, carbon monoxide and hydrogen, which are then reformed into a liquid.

Plastics, wood and metal are plucked out for recycling before the remaining largely organic material is processed.

The search for an alternativ­e to kerosene-based jet fuel is quickening as oil prices again head up.

Qantas has experiment­ed with industrial mustard seed and may work with Air New Zealand to come up with an alternativ­e.

An Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA) meeting was told this month that 100,000 flights a year now use sustainabl­e aviation fuel.

However, this amounted to only 0.5 per cent of the industry’s total fuel bill of about $200 billion a year.

“A massive uplift in production and use is necessary if the industry is to hit its ambitious goal of a 50 per cent cut in net CO emissions by 2050, compared to 2005 [levels],” IATA said.

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