The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Airlines, renewables companies push Biden to make air travel greener

- By Stephanie Kelly

NEW YORK — United States airlines and renewables companies are lobbying the Biden administra­tion to back a big increase in subsidies for lower-carbon aviation fuel, arguing new incentives are needed to help fight climate change and will also make their recovery from the pandemic much greener, industry trade groups told

The push reflects the hefty price that US taxpayers may be asked to pay as President Joe Biden seeks to follow through on his plan to both decarbonis­e the US economy by 2050 and to help battered industries recover from the economic meltdown.

Air travel contribute­s around 2% of global greenhouse gas emissions, the Air Transport Action Group said. It is projected to grow rapidly in coming decades if airlines do not quickly switch to “sustainabl­e aviation fuel”.

This is made from biological­lysourced wastes like old cooking oil, animal fat and plant oils and is a much more expensive product than traditiona­l jet fuel.

The sustainabl­e aviation fuel industry senses a political opening with the Biden administra­tion after four years during which former president Donald Trump downplayed the threats from global warming and backed regulation­s that maximized fossil fuels developmen­t.

“The difference is we’ve got an ear now that’s much more sympatheti­c to figuring out near-term solutions to policy, research and developmen­t,” said Bryan Sherbacow, chief commercial officer for low-carbon fuels provider World Energy.

The National Air Transporta­tion Associatio­n, which represents more than 3 000 companies across the aviation industry, said it was due to meet with the Federal Aviation Administra­tion this month to sell an incentive for sustainabl­e aviation fuel of up to $2 a gallon, which industry analysts estimate would be one of the priciest fuel incentives in the country.

With a Democratic majority in the House of Representa­tive and an evenly split Senate, White House support for legislatio­n on incentives is pivotal.

The FAA said in a statement to that it could not verify informatio­n about specific meetings, though it said it was a “strong proponent” of sustainabl­e aviation fuels.

NATA said it is also trying to meet with the Department of Transporta­tion.

Airlines for America (A4A), which represents US airline companies, including United, American Airlines and Southwest, said it has also been in contact with the Biden administra­tion’s climate change officials to discuss expanding the sustainabl­e aviation fuel market.

Currently, A4A members use only about 1,5 million gallons of green plane fuel in the United States a year, out of a total commercial jet fuel market that exceeds 620 million barrels annually, based on data from A4A and the Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion.

The price of sustainabl­e aviation fuel can be three or four times higher than traditiona­l jet fuel, making it uneconomic­al without government support, said Nancy Young, A4A’s vice-president of environmen­tal affairs.

Currently, sustainabl­e aviation fuel producers are eligible for a $1 per gallon subsidy under an existing federal biodiesel tax credit. The fuel is also eligible for incentives under the US Renewable Fuel Standard and California’s Low Carbon Fuel Standard, which both encourage clean fuel production by generating tradable credits.

US Representa­tive Julia Brownley, a Democrat from California, introduced new legislatio­n in early February that would boost those incentives by authorizin­g $1 billion in federal funding and by creating a blender’s tax credit specific to sustainabl­e aviation fuel.

Analysts said a well-thought out incentive structure — even if expensive — could help to decarbonis­e an industry that will have to rely on some form of liquid fuels for decades.

“Aviation is likely to be a source of carbon emissions for a very long time,” said Robert Campbell, head of oil products research at Energy Aspects. “The decarbonis­ation options for aviation are challengin­g, to say the least.”

Several other countries have already proposed sustainabl­e aviation fuel mandates or are exploring them as a means of addressing increasing carbon output from air travel. A mandate in Norway came into force in January 2020, while the Netherland­s is set to have one in place by 2023.

Globally, more than 250 000 flights have run on sustainabl­e aviation fuel since 2016, while an estimated 10.6 million gallons were produced in 2020, the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n said.

Several companies are betting on future growth.

Chicago-based Boeing, a leading manufactur­er of commercial jetliners, for example, has committed to fly with 100% sustainabl­e aviation fuels by 2030, it said in January.

Meanwhile, Neste, a Finnish oil refiner and renewable fuels producer, said it plans to expand its sustainabl­e aviation fuel global production capability by early 2023 to 510 million gallons per year from 34 million gallons currently.

While several US petroleum refiners have made capital investment­s in retrofitti­ng their plants to produce renewable diesel, they are agnostic about legislatio­n regarding tax credits for sustainabl­e aviation fuel, several US refining industry sources said.

So far, only Phillips 66 has announced its intent to produce the fuel at its planned renewable fuels facility in Rodeo, California. Valero, meanwhile, has said it could produce sustainabl­e aviation fuel in the future “when we need to pivot there.”

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