Wednesday, February 21, 2024

Boeing accuses big oil companies of inaction on sustainable aviation fuel

Major crude suppliers 'need to lean in harder' and crank up production, Boeing’s head of sustainability for the Asia-Pacific region says at the Singapore Airshow


Global supply of sustainable aviation fuel meets barely 1 per cent of the aviation industry’s requirements. 


Bloomberg
Feb 20, 2024

US plane maker Boeing accused the world’s biggest oil companies of doing too little to produce sustainable jet fuel as frustration inside the aviation industry grows about the lack of supply.

Sustainable aviation fuel, made from waste oils and agricultural feedstock, can cut carbon emissions from air travel by as much as 80 per cent, according to the airline sector.

An enormous ramp-up in production is essential to give the industry a chance of reaching its target of carbon neutrality by 2050.

Global supply of SAF, as the sustainable fuel is commonly called, meets barely 1 per cent of the aviation industry’s requirements.

Major oil producers “need to lean in harder” and boost production, Robert Boyd, Boeing’s head of sustainability for the Asia-Pacific region, said at the Singapore Airshow on Tuesday.

First Emirates flight powered by sustainable aviation fuel



Smaller and less-established green fuel producers such as Neste Oyj and SkyNRG BV are doing a better job of building out a SAF industry than well-resourced companies such as Exxon Mobil, said Mr Boyd.

“I don’t think they’re doing enough,” he said of the traditional energy sector.

The inadequate flow of SAF has been a major talking point at the air show. Lifting supply is also essential to making SAF more affordable for airlines.

Conventional jet fuel is already one of the biggest costs for airlines, but SAF can be three to five times more expensive.

Aviation’s transition to net zero will require an investment of as much as $5 trillion through 2050, much of it needed to increase sustainable fuel production, according to the International Air Transport Association.

Iata chief Willie Walsh on Monday implored oil producers to make more low-emissions aviation fuel.

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Every drop that’s made will be bought, even at the current high price, Mr Walsh said. Speaking at an aviation summit in Singapore, he described the airline industry’s struggle to decarbonise as an “existential issue”.

At the same event, Exxon’s vice president for Asia-Pacific fuels, Ong Shwu Hoon, said the company was focused on making more low-emissions fuel for the transport industry, including aviation.

The SAF supply chain requires more investment, she said. Exxon, she added, is learning to deal with the agricultural companies involved in the new process.

Still, Haldane Dodd, executive director of the Air Transport Action Group, a Switzerland-based non-profit working with the aviation industry to map out a path to net zero, maintains the energy industry isn’t doing enough.

Major oil producers are capable of doing much more to support SAF production, Mr Dodd said at the airshow.

“If anybody has the capital, the expertise, the intelligence and the human resources to deliver this product, it’s them,” he said.

Updated: February 21, 2024

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