Middle East conflict exposes America’s aviation fuel vulnerability, says XCF Global
In Texas, XCF Global issued a statement on the ongoing disruption to global aviation fuel markets caused by the Middle East conflict.
As jet fuel and SAF prices surge to historic levels, XCF Global is sharing its perspective on what the current crisis reveals about the structural vulnerabilities of petroleum-dependent aviation fuel supply chains and the role domestic SAF can play in addressing them.
XCF SAF utilizes domestic waste-based feedstock. These feedstocks are not impacted by the Middle Eastern crude supply. “Our focus remains on delivering high quality SAF to our partners, maintaining operational continuity, and supporting the aviation sector as markets stabilize. America’s aviation sector remains deeply tethered to a global oil market that is inherently unstable. The feedstock, the technology, and the workforce to change that exist right here at home,” said Chris Cooper, Chief Executive Officer, XCF Global.
“Domestic waste-based SAF is not a future solution. We believe it can be made available now, that it can be scalable, and that it can be produced entirely from American materials. We believe the current crisis is bringing long-overdue attention to what domestic SAF producers have understood for years; a fuel whose supply chain begins and ends in the United States is a fundamentally different kind of energy security while mitigating climate impact,” he added.
Category: SAF














