Dutch refinery to feed airlines’ thirst for clean fuel


Sustainable aviation fuels are being made from municipal waste, leftovers from the agricultural and forestry industry, crops and plants, and even hydrogen. – EPA pic, April 2, 2023.

SCAFFOLDING and green pipes envelop a refinery in the port of Rotterdam where Finnish giant Neste is preparing to significantly boost production of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF).

Switching to non-fossil aviation fuels that produce less net greenhouse gas emissions is key to plans to decarbonise air transport, a significant contributor to global warming.

Neste, the largest global producer of SAF, uses cooking oil and animal fat at this Dutch refinery.

SAFs are being made from different sources such as municipal waste, leftovers from the agricultural and forestry industry, crops and plants, and even hydrogen.

These technologies are still developing and the end product is more expensive.

But these fuels will help airlines reduce carbon dioxide emissions by up to 80%, said the International Air Transport Association. 

Global output of SAF was 250,000 tonnes last year, less than 0.1% of the more than 300 million tonnes of aviation fuel used during that period. 

“It’s a drop in the ocean but a significant drop,” said Matti Lehmus, CEO of Neste. 

“We’ll be drastically growing our production from 100,000 tonnes to 1.5 million tonnes next year,” he said. 

There clearly is demand. 

The European Union plans to impose the use of a minimum amount of sustainable aviation fuel by airlines, rising from 2% in 2025 to 6% in 2030 and at least 63% in 2050. 

Neste has another site for SAF in Singapore, which will start production in April. 

“With the production facilities of Neste in Rotterdam and Singapore, we can meet the mandate for EU in 2025,” said Jonathan Wood, the company’s vice-president for renewable aviation. 

Vincent Etchebehere, director for sustainable development at Air France, said that “between now and 2030, there will be more demand than supply of SAF”. 

‘Need to mature technologies’ 

Air France-KLM has reached a deal with Neste for the supply of one million tonnes of sustainable aviation fuel between 2023 and 2030.

It has also lined up 10 year-agreements with US firm DG Fuels for 600,000 tonnes and with TotalEnergies for 800,000 tonnes.

At the Rotterdam site, two giant storage tanks of 15,000 cubic metres are yet to be painted.

They lie near a quay where the fuel will be transported by boat to feed Amsterdam’s Schiphol airport and airports in Paris.

The Franco-Dutch group has already taken steps to cut its carbon footprint, using 15% of the global SAF output last year – or 0.6% of its fuel needs.

Neste’s Lehmus said there was a great need to “mature the technologies” to make SAF from diverse sources such as algae, nitrocellulose and synthetic fuels.

Air France CEO Anne Rigail said the prices of SAF are as important as their production.

Sustainable fuel costs €3,500 (RM16,788.13) a tonne globally but only US$2,000 (RM8,825) in the United States thanks to government subsidies. In France, it costs €5,000 a tonne.

“We need backing and we really think the EU can do more,” said Rigail. – AFP, April 2, 2023.



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