SFGate: Airlines push for homegrown jet fuel

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



=20
----------------------------------------------------------------------
This article was sent to you by someone who found it on SFGate.
The original article can be found on SFGate.com here:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=3D/n/a/2008/08/15/financial/=
f115235D94.DTL
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------
Friday, August 15, 2008 (AP)
Airlines push for homegrown jet fuel
By CHRIS KAHN, AP Business Writer


   (08-15) 11:52 PDT PHOENIX, (AP) --
   With the price of oil still above $100 a barrel, everything from wood
chips to chicken fat is being scrutinized as an alternative to traditional
fuel. But when it comes to airplanes, finding the right mix poses a
special challenge.
   "When you're in an airplane, you don't want your fuel to start
solidifying," said Robert Dunn, a Department of Agriculture chemical
engineer who is studying biodiesel jet fuel.
   The airline industry is aggressively pushing for homegrown alternatives =
to
petroleum-based jet fuel, while leaning on customers with a variety of new
travel charges to help control a projected $61 billion industrywide fuel
expense this year. A number of alternatives to standard jet fuel have been
studied for years, though aircraft manufacturers say the challenge is to
find ideas that will work now.
   Jet engines can be retrofitted to run on hydrogen, for example. But
hydrogen does not pack the same punch as traditional jet fuel —
kerosene — and would require airlines to buy planes designed with
massive tanks. That is a tough choice for cash-strapped carriers, said
Billy Glover, managing director of environmental strategy at Boeing
Commercial Airplanes.
   The best bet right now for non-conventional fuel comes from South Africa,
experts said. The country has powered its airline industry for a decade
using a coal-based jet fuel blend developed by petrochemicals group Sasol.
It's technically a "synthetic" fuel, which means it can be used without
altering engines or other aircraft equipment.
   A number of U.S. companies are developing a variety of similar synthetic=
s.
Airline experts say three companies in particular could provide as much as
three million gallons a day of synthetic fuel by 2012: American Clean Coal
Fuels of Portland, Ore., Baard Energy in Vancouver, Wash., and Rentech
Inc. of Los Angeles.
   Though significant supplies will not be ready for several years, the
Commercial Aviation Alternative Fuels Initiative (CAAFI) — a
coalition that includes the Federal Aviation Administration, airline,
manufacturing and airport associations — wants to set standards by
the end of the year for a 50-percent synthetic jet fuel. CAAFI wants
standards for a totally synthetic fuel ready in two years.
   Executive Director Richard L. Altman said the push for new fuel standards
is meant to show investors that airlines will buy synthetic fuel. Doing so
will send needed dollars to energy startups that may one day replace
foreign oil, Altman said.
   "Nobody will invest unless the fuel is certified," he said. "So we have a
bit of a chicken-and-egg problem."
   With more companies investing in alternative energy, the thinking goes,
the more synthetic jet fuel eventually becomes available. The more fuel
available, the easier it will be for airlines to unshackle themselves from
volatile petroleum markets.
   Meanwhile, Boeing and Air New Zealand later this year will test a biofuel
made from the oil-rich seeds of the jatropha tree, a Mexican plant that
grows in warm climates. Other synthetic fuel tests will follow on
Continental Airlines and Japan Airlines flights. In February, Boeing
partnered with Virgin Atlantic to test a flight that included a biofuel
mixture of babassu oil, which comes from a palm tree in northern Brazil,
and coconut oil.
   "We're looking for something that is so correct in its performance that =
it
can be interchanged with petroleum-based kerosene," Glover said. "From a
distribution standpoint, from a technical standpoint, it needs to fit
without modifications or special handling."
   Many biofuels may create more problems than they solve, however. Using
edible feedstocks such as corn and sugar could raise the price of food.
And palm trees for babassu and coconut oil could lead to clearing large
chunks of rain forest.
   These are some of the reasons why algae-based synthetic fuel is getting a
lot of attention.
   Algae is inedible, and it has a relatively high yield compared with other
crops, using less land to produce the same amount of oil.
   "It can be grown anywhere you can have a pool of water and expose it to
sunlight," said Stanford Seto, an expert in aviation fuels who works with
ASTM International, a Pennsyvania-based organization that develops
standards for jet fuel.
   Investors have pumped almost $84 million into companies developing
algae-based fuel so far this year, up from $29 million in all of 2007,
according to the Cleantech Group, an industry research firm.
   Despite its promise, it will be years before algae biofuel could be sold
at a price that would make sense to an airline, said Dave Jones,
co-founder of LiveFuels, an algae fuel startup in San Carlos, Calif.
   "If anyone is below $50 a gallon, I'd be stunned," he said. "We have a
pretty good idea on how to grow algae. The biggest challenge is in the
harvesting and how to extract it from the water."
   Even if prices come down, most airlines see synthetic fuel as a chance to
run a greener airline, not necessarily a cheaper one, said Nancy Young,
vice president of environmental affairs for the Air Transport Association.
   More fuel sources could temper the effect oil speculation has on gas
prices, and they could give carriers fuel at a cost they can count on, she
said. But "you aren't going to find a fuel that's pennies on the dollar
than what we find today," she said.
   For travelers, that means that fewer flight options and charges for
checked bags, drinks and other items are here to stay.
   "Even if we were to double the volume we were to make in biofuels every
year for the next 10 years, we're still looking at maybe this will impact
15 percent of the overall fuel supply," said Brian Fan, Cleantech's senior
director of research.
   "Realistically, for anything to be happening at scale, enough to actually
impact an airline's bottom line, we're years away," Fan said. -------------=
---------------------------------------------------------
Copyright 2008 AP

<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

If you wish to unsubscribe from the AIRLINE List, please send an E-mail to:
"listserv@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx".  Within the body of the text, only write the following:"SIGNOFF AIRLINE".

[Index of Archives]         [NTSB]     [NASA KSC]     [Yosemite]     [Steve's Art]     [Deep Creek Hot Springs]     [NTSB]     [STB]     [Share Photos]     [Yosemite Campsites]