Southwest Airlines experiments with renewable jet fuel from forest waste

The use of biofuel in aircraft may be really starting to take off. Southwest Airlines is the latest carrier to experiment with renewable jet fuel, recently signing an agreement with Red Rock Biofuels to purchase low-carbon fuel made from forest residue. 

A Southwest Airlines Boeing 737 comes in for a landing at Love Field in Dallas. Southwest will buy approximately 3 million gallons of renewable fuel from forest waste per year, with the first deliveries expected in 2016.

LM Otero/AP/File

September 26, 2014

In the US, there isn't a lot of enthusiasm for automotive biofuels these days. Concerns over the potential impact on food supplies, the growing sales of practicalelectric cars, and other factors seem to be keeping most biofuels out of the mainstream.

Yet the use of biofuel in aircraft may be really starting to take off (pardon the pun).

Southwest Airlines is the latest carrier to experiment with renewable jet fuel. It recently signed an agreement with Red Rock Biofuels to purchase low-carbon fuel made from forest residue, according to Green Car Congress.

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Southwest will buy approximately 3 million gallons of the renewable fuel per year, with the first deliveries expected in 2016 for use in the San Francisco Bay Area.

The jet fuel starts out as woody biomass feedstock, which undergoes gasification to release a "synthesis gas," which is then processed and liquified into hydrocarbons.

 Red Rock Biofuels' first plant is expected to turn 140,000 tons of the forest residue into 12 million gallons of fuel per year. That includes Southwest's jet fuel, as well as diesel and naphtha.

This is just one of several ongoing efforts to clean up the skies with biofuels.

KLM Royal Dutch Airlines started using biofuel on flights between New York and Amsterdam last year, while South African Airlines and Boeing plan to test a tobacco-based fuel grown in the airline's home country.

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In addition, Boeing is also involved in the development of "green diesel," which is made by splitting molecules from waste oil and fats with hydrogen.

All of these efforts could help lower the airline industry's overall carbon emissions, which account for 2 percent of the global today.

By some projections, that total could rise to 5 percent by 2050.