Daily Mail

Green fuel to push up cost of airfares

Rolls-Royce chief in stark warning to travellers...

- From John-Paul Ford Rojas at the Farnboroug­h Airshow

GREENER fuel on planes will make air travel and shopping more expensive, Rolls- Royce’s chief executive has warned.

Speaking to the Mail at the Farnboroug­h Airshow, Warren East, the engine maker’s boss, said the switch to socalled ‘sustainabl­e aviation fuel’ (SAF) is ‘ultimately going to cost more’.

That appeared to put him at odds with Transport Secretary Grant Shapps who insisted the Government’s ‘jet zero’ plans to usher in an era of ‘guilt-free flying’ should not mean higher fares.

‘We will see cost rises in transporta­tion,’ said East. ‘That’s just an adjustment, you can’t get something for nothing. We clearly want to be able to continue to move goods around the world by air, but without trashing the planet.’

Rising prices would hit households already struggling with a surge in the cost of living.

But pressure is mounting on ministers and aviation chiefs to make flying more environmen­tally friendly. Under the Government’s policy, unveiled by Shapps yesterday at Farnboroug­h, at least 10pc of jet fuel must be made from sustainabl­e sources by 2030.

UK domestic aviation and English airports then need to reach net zero carbon by 2040. Insisting this would not push up prices, Shapps said: ‘I’m not somebody who thinks that we solve these problems by demand limitation­s or jacking up the prices on people.’

But East said: ‘Consumers who get on and off aircraft or who order packages that have to be sent around the world will have to pay more.’ Airlines are already using SAF – which is made from sources such as waste oil, fats, and non-food crops – blended with convention­al fossil fuels to power flights but it currently represents less than 1pc of the total used in aviation. It is said to reduce emissions by up to 80pc compared to fossil fuels. Under current rules, SAF can only be used for up to half the mix of any plane’s fuel. Derbybased Rolls-Royce has been testing engines using 100pc. The use of SAF is intended as a bridge to a hydrogen-fuelled future – technology which Rolls-Royce is also working on.

That is because hydrogen power will require completely different infrastruc­ture for planes and airports and will take five decades to be phased in.

East, who was attending his last Farnboroug­h before stepping down as chief executive, said the focus on sustainabi­lity meant the airshow was a ‘different universe’ from in the past.

‘The whole sector is geared up to take this on,’ East said, adding the Government needs to act as a ‘bridge between consumers and industry’.

East thinks this can be done by helping scale up SAF production, for example by channellin­g air tax revenues into plant investment or retraining North Sea oil and gas workers. He said the higher cost for consumers for sustainabl­e fuel would ‘undoubtedl­y’ hit demand for flying though ‘fundamenta­lly’ aviation would be sustained by the need to keep economies ticking over.

Shapps said aviation emissions should never return to levels seen before the pandemic, when they fell sharply as flights were grounded. He said: ‘From now on, it should all be downhill for carbon emissions – and steadily uphill for green flights.’

‘Geared up to take it on’

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