Cooking oil powers commercial flight amid green debate | Inquirer News

Cooking oil powers commercial flight amid green debate

/ 05:48 AM May 20, 2021

PARIS — Air France-KLM flew a biofuel-powered Airbus A350 from Paris to Montreal on Tuesday, demonstrating the airline’s readiness to adopt low-emissions fuel despite deep industry divisions over the pace of its adoption.

Air France Flight 342 took off from Charles de Gaulle airport with a 16 percent mix of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) in its fuel tanks, produced in France by Total from used cooking oil.

The flight signaled a “shared ambition to decarbonize air transportation and to develop a SAF supply chain in France,” the companies said in a joint statement with airport operator ADP.

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Jet fuel produced from biomass or synthetically from renewable power has the potential to slash carbon emissions, albeit at a heavy cost by comparison to the price of kerosene.

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Starting next year, flights departing from France will be required to use 1 percent SAF, ahead of European Union goals to reach 2 percent by 2025 and 5 percent by 2030 under the bloc’s Green Deal policy.

But traditional network airlines have sought to exempt long-haul flights, arguing that a Europe-only SAF requirement could expose them to unfair foreign competition.

That has drawn an angry response from low-cost airlines including Ryanair, Wizz Air and easyJet, which wrote to the EU in March to demand that the rules apply to all flights originating in Europe.

Airlines have a “major responsibility” to cut emissions, Air France-KLM chief executive Ben Smith said on Tuesday— while reiterating doubts about European SAF quotas for long haul.

“We have to be on a level playing field,” Smith told Reuters. “We can’t have a situation where airlines that are based outside Europe can undercut us, [and] that is a real concern.”

Transport and Environment, a Brussels-based campaign group that signed the budget carriers’ open letter, again rejected calls to exclude long haul from biofuel rules.

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Any such exemption would have “no logic,” the group’s aviation director Andrew Murphy said.

Green fuel used for the Paris-Montreal flight was produced by Total at its Oudalle plant near Le Havre as well as La Mede, a refinery in southern France converted to biofuels in 2019.

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