BOEING

Boeing Expands Global Efforts to Scale-Up Sustainable Aviation Fuels

  • Company accelerating collaboration locally to scale SAF globally
  • Focus areas include cross-sector collaboration, policy advocacy, SAF compatibility research and SAF purchases

DUBAI, December 5. Boeing is accelerating its global efforts to scale-up sustainable aviation fuels (SAF), which serves as the aviation industry’s most significant lever in reducing emissions today and into the future.

At the 2023 Dubai Air Show, Boeing and Zero signed an agreement to work together to advance sustainable aviation fuels. Attending the signing ceremony were (left to right) Brian Moran, Boeing vice president of Global Sustainability Policy & Partnerships, Paddy Lowe, CEO of Zero, Sheila Remes, Boeing vice president of Environmental Sustainability, Dr. Brendan Nelson, president of Boeing Global, and Oliver Christian, British Consul General to Dubai and HM Trade Commissioner for the Middle East and Pakistan. (Photo: Boeing)

Focus areas include Boeing’s efforts to catalyze collaboration, research and policy development around SAF, which can reduce lifecycle CO2 up to 85%.

“We’re deepening our collaborative work across the globe in pursuit of a world with more SAF,” said Chris Raymond, Boeing Chief Sustainability Officer. “SAF holds the greatest potential to reduce aviation’s emissions, and we are focused on continuing to innovate and collaborate to unlock the production of sustainable aviation fuel around the world.”

Boeing brought energy producers and aviation leaders in the UAE together to form a consortium called Air-CRAFT to accelerate the research, scaling and production of renewable and advanced aviation fuels in the country and beyond. Brian Moran (second from left), Boeing vice president of Global Sustainability Policy & Partnerships, is joined by consortium members from Masdar, Emirates Airline, Khalifa University, Honeywell, ENOC, Etihad Airways and ADNOC. (Photo: Emirates Airline)

The key challenges to greater use of SAF are the limited supply and high cost. Current use of SAF represents 0.1% of global jet fuel demand.

In the lead up to COP28, Boeing worked together to:

  • Bring energy producers and aviation leaders in the UAE together to form a consortium called Air-CRAFT to accelerate the research, scaling and production of renewable and advanced aviation fuels in the country and beyond.
  • Launch an initiative with the United States to catalyze the development and use of SAF among Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) member countries.
  • Announce a collaboration with Zero Petroleum for testing and analyzing the next generation of technologies to accelerate the supply of SAF.
  • Support discussions at ICAO’s Third Conference on Aviation Alternative Fuels, where governments from over 100 countries set a goal that aviation fuel in 2030 should be 5% less carbon intensive than conventional jet fuel.
  • Join the Corporate Coalition for Innovation & Technology toward Net Zero (CCITNZ), a cross-sector business alliance dedicated to helping countries meet decarbonization and climate change goals through innovation and technology.
  • Provide technical expertise on the first 100% SAF flight across the Atlantic on a commercial jetliner – a Boeing 787 Dreamliner. This was a Virgin Atlantic-led project, supported by funding from the UK Department for Transport.
  • Sign an agreement with Masdar, the Abu Dhabi-based renewable energy company, to advance and support the development and adoption of SAF policies in the UAE and beyond.
Boeing signed an agreement with Masdar, the Abu Dhabi-based renewable energy company, to advance and support the development and adoption of SAF policies in the UAE and beyond. The Memorandum of Understanding was signed by Mohammad Abdelqader El Ramahi, Chief Green Hydrogen Officer, Masdar, and Kuljit Ghata-Aura, President, Middle East, Turkey & Africa, Boeing. (Photo: Masdar)

Boeing seeks to build on this momentum at COP28 and continue its focus to help scale SAF globally through:

  • Industry collaboration and policy advocacy: Boeing continues to work with consulting firms, academic institutions and non-profit organizations to conduct studies in more than a dozen countries to identify viable pathways for locally produced SAF, using local feedstock solutions. One collaboration, with the Roundtable on Sustainable Biomaterials, explores SAF feedstock opportunities in Southeast Asia, Ethiopia, South Africa, and Brazil.
  • Investments in product compatibility work: Boeing is mobilizing its supply chain to complete the testing necessary to ensure Boeing commercial airplanes are 100% SAF-compatible by 2030.
  • SAF purchases: Since 2022, Boeing has agreements to purchase6 million gallons of SAF for its U.S. commercial airplane operations.
Boeing Provided technical expertise on the first 100% SAF flight across the Atlantic on a commercial jetliner – a Boeing 787 Dreamliner. This was a Virgin Atlantic-led project, supported by funding from the UK Department for Transport. Shown are project partners and key stakeholders, including Boeing representatives, at London Heathrow airport ahead of the flight. (Photo: Virgin Atlantic)

Advancing renewable energy such as SAF is one of four strategic levers Boeing is pursuing to support the commercial aviation industry’s decarbonization goals. The other levers are fleet renewal, advanced technology and operational efficiency.

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