Formålet med bloggen er å bidra til informasjon om luftfart av alle slag. Også litt om ubåter og forsvarsspørsmål. Nyheter vil du finne her også, en del på engelsk som er det mest brukte luftfartsspråket. Har du selv noe som bør komme ut, så send meg en mail til per.gram@hesbynett.no
A BRA ATR 72-600 powered by a biofuel blend consisting of
45-percent cooking oil takes off from Stockholm-Bromma Airport. (Photo: ATR) An ATR 72-600 operated by Swedish carrier BRA (formerly Braathens Regional) took
off from Stockholm-Bromma Airport on Wednesday for a flight to Umeå fueled with
45 percent used cooking oil, marking the first biofuel-powered flight of an ATR aircraft. BRA provides an essential air service
to link its main hub of Stockholm-Bromma to 12 Swedish regions served with a
fleet now in transition from Saab 2000s to ATR 72-600s. Several research and development
initiatives have started in Sweden to produce biofuels from different types of
wood. Forests cover more than 50 percent of the country, and grow at a rate of
120 million cubic meters annually. Making domestic air traffic in Sweden
completely fossil-free would require less than 2 percent of the total annual
forest growth, according to government estimates. Meanwhile, ATR continues to invest in what it
calls virtuous technologies and contributes to European environmental research
and development efforts, including support to customers and local governments
in developing business plans related to fuel selection, routing, certification
and biofuel availability. “Today’s challenge is to get a
large-scale production of biofuels at affordable costs while avoiding a
negative impact on the environment,” said ATRCEO Christian Scherer. “Swedish
airlines like BRA can take advantage of the massive
expansion of its forests, along with the operation of fuel-efficient
turboprops, to reach the ambitious goal of halving their CO2 emissions by 2025.” BRA chief executive Christian Clemens
remains critical of proposals within the Swedish government aimed at meeting
that goal, however. “Sweden is currently debating a new tax on aviation,” said
Clemens. “It will have a minimal impact on emissions, and will unfortunately
slow down the pace in which we can continue to make aviation more sustainable.”
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