Quantcast





RSS
May 27, 2008 | Jim Lane | Comments 0

Air France-KLM signs with Algae Link to procure algae oil for jet fuel blending

In the Netherlands, Air France-KLM announced an agreement with Algae-Link to procure algae oil to be blended with conventional jet fuel. Deliveries of algae oil will commence by the end of 2008, according to Algae-Link executives, but quantities were not disclosed.

Airbus and Honeywell recently announced a partnership that they said would replace up to 30 percent of jet fuel with biofuels. The partnership, which also includes Jet Blue and the International Aero Engines consortium, said that they would produce biofuels from algae and other non-food vegetable oils. The International Aero Engines consortium included Pratt & Whitney and Rolls-Royce. Fuels will be developed by Honeywell UOP, which last year won a contract with the Defense Advanced Research Projects Administration (DARPA) to develop biofuels for the US military.

The partnership establishes the second biojetfuel consortium. Virgin, Continental, General Electric, and Air New Zealand are also conducting trials.

Continental Airlines will become the first US airliner to conduct a biofuels test flight.
The company announced that, in partnership with GE and Boeing, it would
schedule a test biofuels flight in 2008. The companies said that the
test would include a different set of feedstocks than those tested in
the historic Virgin Atlantic flight, which included babassu and coconut
oil.

The companies would test up to 50 percent biodiesel, compared to the B20 blend used in the Virgin flight. Air New Zealand will also be testing feedstocks and blends in a flight scheduled for later this year.

The World Development Movement called the recent Virgin 747 biodiesel test flight a “publicity stunt with dangerous consequences for the planet” and said that Virgin owner Sir Richard Branson “should back a campaign to include aviation in the climate change bill.”

Sir Richard Branson, in remarks surrounding the Virgin 747 biodiesel test flight, said that algae would almost certainly be the feedstock for commercial aviation biofuels, implying that the selection of coconut and babassu oil had been made in light of an algae oil shortage. Branson announced a new business unit of Virgin Atlantic Airways that would produce algae-based biofuels for the airline’s use. Branson told reporters that algae is the best fuel feedstock because it does not affect food supply. He said that his company is “talking to a lot of sewage plants about setting up algae plants above and using a lot of
the CO2 coming off those sewage plants” and said that using CO2 to produce algae for low-emission fuels was a “a double-whammy effect.”

IATA has set a goal of making planes 25 percent more fuel efficient
by 2022, and “zero emission” planes within 50 years, but with airlines
expected to increase fleet size by 140 percent in the next 20 years,
such an effort would not keep pace with the rate of airline fleet
growth. Giovanni Bisignani, Director General and CEO of IATA said, “Air
transport takes its environmental responsibility seriously. Alongside
safety and security it is a pillar on which we have built a great
global industry. Despite our good track record, air transport’s carbon
footprint is growing. That is not acceptable. Our vision is for air
transport to achieve carbon neutral growth in the medium-term, on the
way to a carbon emission free future.

Free Subscription to the Daily Biofuels Digest e-newsletter


bdnl091008Subscribe FREE to the world's most-widely read biofuels daily. Enter your email in the box below,
or click here to subscribe:

Related Stories


  • Bioking
  • For information on Bioking, see Algae-Link. The Bioking website is non-operational as of October 2008....
  • France delays on implementation of E10 ethanol mandate as logistics problems surface
  • In France, Oil & Gas Journal is reporting that the move from mandated E5 to E10 ethanol blending will be delayed, and only 75 percent of service stations in France will be in compliance by year-en...
  • Solix signs R&D agreement with Los Alamos National Lab; targets algae oil extraction technology
  • In Colorado, algae pioneer Solix Biofuels announced the signing of a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA) with the Los Alamos National Laboratory. Under the agreement, Solix will gai...
  • Green Star Products signs with Biotech Research to construct 100-acre algae biodiesel facility
  • Green Star Products has signed a deal with Biotech Research to construct a 100-acre algae biodiesel facility. The plant will be located in the Midwest adjacent to an existing biodiesel plant which wil...
  • PetroSun signs algae biodiesel trial with town of Gilbert, AZ
  • In Arizona, algae biofuels pioneer PetroSun announced that it had signed with the town of Gilbert to commence an algae-to-biofuels wastewater pilot program at the Neely Wastewater Reclamation Facility...
  • Swift biofuel said to replace aviation gas without engine work, extends range, costs $2 per gallon less
  • Swift Enterprises said that it has developed a synthetic Swift Fuel biofuel that replaces 100LL aviation gas without engine modifications, at a price $2 less per gallon, increases range by 15-20 perce...

    Hot Topics


    The Hottest 50 Companies in Bioenergy
    Latest algae-to-energy news
    Latest jatropha news
    Latest Waste-to-energy news

    Entry Information

    Filed Under: Consumers & Fleets

    RSSPost a Comment  |  Trackback URL

    You must be logged in to post a comment.