From green slime to jet fuel: algae
offers airlines a cleaner future
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[June 16, 2016]
OTTOBRUN, Germany (Reuters) - As
airlines struggle to find cleaner ways to power jets and with an
industry-wide meeting on CO2 emissions just months away, scientists are
busy growing algae in vast open tanks at an Airbus site at Ottobrun,
near Munich.
The European aerospace group is part-financing the Munich
Technical University project to grow algae for biofuel and, although
commercial production is a long way off, hopes are high.
Thomas Brueck, Munich TU's associate professor of industrial
biocatalysis, says that the biofuel from algaculture could cater for
3-5 percent of jetfuel needs by about 2050.
Algae can grow 12 times faster than plants cultivated on soil and
produces an oil yield about 30 times that of rapeseed.
However, although aviation biofuel made from feedstocks such as flax
or used cooking oil is already available, limited stocks and low oil
prices mean only a few airlines, including Lufthansa and KLM, are
using it on a trial basis.
"To substitute 100 percent of the kerosene use today, we will not do
it with algae alone. We need a combination of different technologies
to actually enable that substitution," Brueck said.
Airbus also says the technology, in which it and the Bavarian
government are investing more than 10 million euros ($11 million)
between them, is still at an early stage and is not financially
viable for airlines just yet.
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An Airbus A350 is pictured at the ILA Berlin Air Show in
Schoenefeld, south of Berlin, Germany, May 31, 2016.
REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch/File Photo
"But we are sure that over time, we will make it possible to offer
kerosene made of algae for a competitive price," an Airbus spokesman
said.
(Reporting by Reuters TV; Additional reporting by Victoria Bryan;
Editing by Louise Ireland)
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