Aviation

Airlines consider palm oil jet fuel after first commercial flight

Airlines consider palm oil jet fuel after first commercial flight

Airlines globally are considering oil-blended fuel as an alternative to Jet A1, whose cost has risen astronomically .
This is coming after Indonesia on Friday flew its first commercial flight using palm oil-blended jet fuel.
Indonesia is the world’s biggest producer of the commodity.

The country is pushing for wider use of biofuels to cut fuel imports.
Operated by flag carrier Garuda Indonesia, the Boeing 737-800NG aircraft carried more than 100 passengers from the capital Jakarta to Surakarta city about 550 kilometres (342 miles) away, Garuda Indonesia CEO Irfan Setiaputra said.
“We will discuss further with Pertamina, Energy Ministry and other parties to ensure this fuel is commercially reasonable,” Irfan said during a ceremony.

He added the plane was set to return to Jakarta later on Friday.
Garuda conducted several tests including a flight test on the new fuel earlier this month and an engine ground test in August.

According to Reuters, the palm-oil blended jet fuel is produced by Indonesian state energy firm PT Pertamina at its Cilacap refinery.

It uses hydro-processed esters and fatty acid (HEFA) technology and is made of refined bleached deodorized palm kernel oil.

Benefits of palm-oil jet fuel

Pertamina has said the palm-based fuel emits less atmosphere warming greenhouse gases compared with fossil fuels.

Palm oil producing countries have called for the edible oil to be included in feedstock for the production of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF), Reuters reports.

“In 2021, Pertamina successfully produced 2.0 SAF in its Cilacap unit using co-processing technology and was made of refined bleached deodorized palm kernel oil with production capacity 1,350 kilolitres per day,” said Alfian Nasution, a director at Pertamina.

A director at the Energy Ministry, Harris Yahya,s aid the use of biofuel would lower the greenhouse effect.

The aviation industry, a major emitter of greenhouse gases, is looking for ways to cut its carbon footprint by using alternative fuels.

Experts say the industry will need 450 billion litres of SAF a year by 2050, if the fuel is to account for around 65 per cent of the mitigation needed to achieve net-zero targets.

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