Biofuels For Airlines Promising, But Hurdles Remain
Date: 10-Mar-09
Country: UK
Author: Michael Szabo and John Bowker
ANALYSIS - Biofuels For Airlines Promising, But Hurdles Remain Photo: Mike
Blake
A pilot
prepares for his flight as a worker finishes off fueling a United Airlines
plane before departure at San Francisco International airport July 7, 2008.
Photo: Mike Blake
LONDON - Biofuels could be used to fly commercial airlines within the next
decade as a viable alternative to kerosene, although costs and concerns over
environmental impact remain big barriers.
Airlines including Virgin Atlantic, Continental, Air New Zealand and Japan
Airlines have already flown on routes with one engine part-powered by a
range of biofuels including algae and jatropha.
Jatropha, a poisonous plant that produces seeds that can be refined into
biofuels, is being touted as a good alternative fuel and a potentially
powerful weapon against climate change.
Experts say the perennial plant can grow on marginal land with limited
rainfall, and does not compete with other food crops or encourage
deforestation.
Following its flight using jatropha in late December, Air New Zealand has
set a goal to have 10 percent of fuel coming from biofuel sources by 2013,
while Virgin is aiming for 5 percent by 2015.
But Captain David Morgan, Air New Zealand's chief pilot, said bio-jet fuels
had three major obstacles to overcome before regular use in aircraft
engines.
"The fuel source has to be environmentally sustainable and not compete with
existing food resources, it has to be a drop-in replacement for traditional
jet fuel, and it needs to be cost competitive with existing fuel supplies
and be readily available," he told Reuters.
SLASH AND BURN
Although the jatropha industry could create millions of jobs in the poorest
countries in Africa and Asia, some warn more research is needed into the
economic, social and environmental impacts of jatropha before production is
ramped up.
"If you divert land from food production for jatropha, then you reduce the
amount of food on the market ... On the other hand, you might increase local
income to buy food. The impact is not that clear cut," Jean-Philippe
Denruyter, a director at environmental group WWF, said.
Indigenous leaders from the Philippine island of Mindanao warned in December
that 500 hectares of jatropha had already displaced food crops like rice,
corn and bananas.
Deforestation for palm oil crops, which can also be refined into biofuel,
has also triggered vast fires through slash-and-burn farming in Indonesia.
"All of the airlines have very strict sustainability criteria, one of them
being no deforestation," said Sanjay Pingle, president of Terasol Energy,
the firm that provided the biofuels for the Continental, Air New Zealand and
Japan flights.
"All of the jatropha sourced for these flights came from marginal land not
suitable for food production, that had no significant indigenous growth on
it for at least 20 years."
Scientists say deforestation accounts for a fifth of global greenhouse gas
emissions, while aviation makes up 2-4 percent.
OIL MOVES
Through a joint venture with BP, London-based biofuel company D1 Oils has
planted over 250,000 hectares of jatropha, or around a quarter of the
current world supply.
D1-BP Fuel Crops expects to plant 1 million hectares over the next four
years, but D1 Oils' Graham Prince said most seeds are currently being
replanted instead of being crushed for oil.
"There's actually relatively little jatropha oil around at the moment," he
said.
Falling crude oil prices also mean jatropha may not be able to compete on
price, which could lead to a slow down in production.
Crude oil traded up to $147 a barrel last summer, making jatropha a bargain
alternative. But crude is now trading below $50 a barrel.
"If you look at jatropha's cost of production, competing with crude oil and
without subsidies, you're looking at between $50 to $80 a barrel," Pingle
said.
He added: "In our view, we're at least five years away from being able to
have jatropha oil available on a regular basis in some sort of small
blending level."
Government funding is crucial if the fuel is to consistently compete with
kerosene, Andrew Herdman, director general of the Association of Asia
Pacific Airlines, said.
"(Biofuel) relies on subsidies for crops and refineries. Even with all the
advantages, it still struggles to compete on price," he told Reuters.
He added that emissions targets were not industry specific, meaning aviation
could be snubbed and resources moved to cheaper sectors such as road
transport if it was deemed too expensive.
"The object is to reduce carbon emissions overall, not to reduce emissions
in every sector. There is an argument to direct biofuels to less onerous
applications," he said.
But he concluded that obstacles could be overcome.
"We have to be realistic about timescales, but two or three years ago it
looked 20 years away. Now, I think we are two or three years away (from
commercial viability)," he said.
(Editing by Sue Thomas)
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