Boeing hails green diesel 'breakthrough' for aviation
industry
Fuel made from vegetable oils and fats could offer low carbon
answer to rising airline pollution levels
Biofuels
currently used in cars and trucks could be used to power planes, according to
leading aircraft manufacturer Boeing.
It says Green Diesel, which is
derived from vegetable oils and fats, is chemically similar to aviation biofuels
and releases 50% less carbon dioxide than oil-based fuels over its
lifecycle.
In a statement Dr James Kinder, a Technical Fellow in Boeing
Commercial Airplanes Propulsion Systems Division, said this discovery could
represent "a major breakthrough."
"We are collaborating with our industry
partners and the aviation community to move this innovative solution forward and
reduce the industry's reliance on fossil fuel."
Boeing says it is seeking
approval from the US Federal Aviation Administration for aircraft to fly on
green diesel, but admits current levels of production would only be able to
provide 1% of global jet fuel demand.
Climate change
Efforts to
develop cleaner alternatives to jet fuel that release lower quantities of
climate warming greenhouse gases have accelerated in recent years. Air transport
currently accounts for between 2-5% of global CO2 emissions.
Rising oil
prices and the threat of an aviation carbon trading scheme have forced companies
to consider ways of powering planes through various types of fuel.
The
International Air Transport Association (IATA) has set an ambitious target to
halve net 2005 emissions levels by 2050. Figures from PwC indicate this requires
efficiency savings of 5.1% a year.
Aviation expert Professor David Lee
from Manchester Metropolitan University told RTCC various forms of biofuels
could offer anything between 10-25% of the fleet's liquid volume requirement by
the middle of the century.
"Biofuels are a realistic prospect. They can't
be produced in sufficient volumes yet, but they may start to make a difference
if pursued vigorously by about 2040-2050," he said.
Systemic
problems
Green Diesel is frequently described as one of the cleaner
members of the biofuels family, but still faces some of the same issues -
including the need to sustainably source raw materials.
In theory
biofuels can offer a 'zero net emissions' source of fuel, but in practice this
depends where they are produced and what plants are used.
Critics say the
growth of the biofuel industry is linked to land grabs in poorer parts of the
world, as well as rising levels of hunger, as agriculture is switched from food
to fuel crops.
The impacts of climate change may also play a role in
determining the success of biofuels - drought or excessive rainfall in growing
areas may mean some crops are unsustainable.
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