British Airways, in partnership with the Solena
Group, is to establish a sustainable jet-fuel plant with plans to
use the low-carbon fuel generated to power part of its fleet from
2014.
The new fuel will be derived from waste biomass and
manufactured in a state-of-the-art facility that can convert a
variety of waste materials, destined for landfill, into aviation
fuel.
The self-contained plant, likely to be sited in
east London, will convert 500,000 tonnes of waste per year into 16
million gallons of green jet fuel through a process that offers
lifecycle greenhouse gas savings of up to 95% compared to
fossil-fuel derived jet kerosene.
This volume of fuel
would be more than twice the amount required to make all of
British Airways' flights at nearby London City Airport
carbon-neutral.
The project will make further major
savings in greenhouse emissions by reducing the volume of waste
sent to landfill, thus avoiding production of the powerful global
warming agent, methane, and generating 20MW of electricity a year
from renewable sources.
British Airways has signed a
letter of intent to purchase all the fuel produced by the plant,
which will be built by the Solena Group Inc., an advanced bio
energy and bio fuels company based in Washington DC.
Four
sites in the east of London are among those under consideration
for the construction of the bio-jet fuel plant. The scheme will
lead to the creation of up to 1,200 jobs in the area and could
reduce significantly local authority landfill tax bills.
Willie Walsh, British Airways' chief executive, said, "This unique
partnership with Solena will pave the way for realising our
ambitious goal of reducing net carbon emissions by 50% by
2050. We believe it will lead to the production of a real
sustainable alternative to jet kerosene. We are absolutely
determined to reduce our impact on climate change and are proud to
lead the way on aviation's environmental initiatives."
Dr
Robert Do, chairman and chief executive of the Solena Group added,
"The Solena - British Airways BioJetFuel project will efficiently
convert biomass into clean renewable fuels and electricity and is
completely carbon neutral. The plant will be a state-of-the-art
renewable fuel manufacturing facility, distinct from a standard
waste to energy incinerator facility. It will not produce any
polluting emissions or undesirable by-products."
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