Page added on January 12, 2012
Lufthansa has stopped testing biofuel in its aircraft because it has exhausted its stocks of biosynthetic kerosene and no other reliable supplies are available. The final test flight was a long-haul service to the US.
German airline Lufthansa ended its six-month trial of biosynthetic kerosene with a transatlantic test flight on Thursday.
The Boeing 747-400 left Frankfurt for Washington DC carrying around 40 tons of a biosynthetic fuel mix. The company said the alternative fuel would reduce the flight’s carbon footprint by 38 tons – the same amount emitted by six connections between Frankfurt and Berlin.
The long-haul trial was the final test in a program that saw Lufthansa operate 1,187 domestic flights between Frankfurt and Hamburg using a 50/50 blend of regular fuel and bio-kerosene in one of the plane’s two engines. The result was a total saving of about 1,500 tons of CO2.
Not so fast
The airline’s vice-president in charge of the biofuel project, Joachim Buse, said the trial produced “a positive result from which we want to continue to work.”
But he added that Lufthansa would not make regular use of the biofuel, which was made using Jatropha plants grown in Indonesia, until global production increased to a level that could support routine operations.
“As a next step, we will focus on the suitability, availability, sustainability and certification of raw materials,” Buse said in a conference call.
“The objective is to arrive at a price on the basis of which we can work,” he added.
Arne Roth from the Munich-based aviation think-tank Bauhaus Luftfahrt said that even if Lufthansa could secure large volumes of biomass, expanding the supply chain downstream would be very difficult.
“Right now there just aren’t enough refineries capable of producing this type of fuel,” Roth told Deutsche Welle. “These facilities are quite different from the refineries that produce biodiesel.”
Food for thought
Airlines have been racing to cut carbon dioxide emissions since the European Union announced it would include the aviation industry in its Emissions Trading Scheme starting this year.
Lufthansa said its biosynthetic kerosene emitted about 50 percent less CO2 than regular fuel, but many environmental groups remain wary of biofuels in general because some sources, such as palm oil, use land that could have be used to grow crops to feed people instead.
“The problem is there’s a global shortage of agricultural land,” said Gesche Jürgens from Greenpeace.
“We need to decide whether we want to use that land to produce biofuel or food. If we choose food, then any biofuel production on top of that would require additional land. That normally means clearing a forest somewhere, so nature pays the price.”
Business-class greenwash
Jürgen Schmid from the Fraunhofer Institute for Wind Energy and Energy System Technology agreed and described the biofuel trend as environmental “window-dressing.”
Although biofuels were suitable for small-scale application such as heating homes, they were a poor choice for powering vehicles and aircraft, he said.
“If you use biomass to produce fuel, you only get about 50 percent of the total energy contained in that material. The rest is lost in the production process, which is very complex and expensive,” Schmid said.
He added that the vast areas of land needed to grow fuel crops meant “using conventional fuel would be more environmentally friendly.”
Lufthansa may have found a solution to the food versus fuel debate, however.
Last month, Australian company Algae.Tec announced it signed a memorandum of understanding with the German carrier to jointly assess the fuel-making potential of oil extracted from algae grown in bio-reactors.
Other non-plant-based options for creating next-generation biofuels are also in the works. News agency Reuters reports British Airways plans to start powering its fleet with a fuel refined from waste by 2015. Rival carrier Virgin Atlantic intends to start using a waste gases-derived fuel by 2014.
4 Comments on "Lufthansa suspends biofuel test flights"
Rick on Thu, 12th Jan 2012 8:26 pm
This tells the whole story: “Lufthansa has stopped testing biofuel in its aircraft because it has exhausted its stocks of biosynthetic kerosene and no other reliable supplies are available.”
Nothing can or will be able to replace oil. We will soon discover the party is over, and most won’t like it. And that we must learn to live local, and eat local. Flying will be a thing of the past, which will apply to cars, etc.
DC on Fri, 13th Jan 2012 12:18 am
This comment just blows me away
As a next step, we will focus on the suitability, availability, sustainability and certification of raw materials,” Buse said in a conference call.
Turning Indonesia into a energy colony and destroying the enviroment there, far from where German citizens can see the actual damage, is NONE of the things he listed. Bio-fools for jets is even an dumber idea than Bio-fools for cars. There is nothing remotely sustainable about importaing Bio-fools made from petroleum, ship them around the globe(is there anyplace farther away from Germany than Indonesia?, not many), and sticking them in 747s so Europeans can fly instead of useing there excellent rail system there.
Why are we even talking about bio-fools….its sign on maddness that we even think bio-fools will ‘save’ the status quo.
DC on Fri, 13th Jan 2012 6:20 am
To add, the ‘non-food’ bio-fool is a red-herring. It still takes energy, water, substantial amounts of land, and more importantly, scarce capital to build such things. Algae bio-fool is incredibly expensve, algae is even worse than useing food crops, at least in terms of energy and water. The only reason algae is even on menu is because we havent gotten down to useing it for food as well. Branson @ Virgin is a moron with his coconut powered 747 schemes. How about we just stop flying and driving around in FF powered vehicles, start walking bikeing, takeing train, and only on rare occasions, fly. That will solve the fuel\pollution problem in one swoop.
James on Sat, 14th Jan 2012 10:34 pm
This just shows that if we begin to use Biofuels and Ethanol at the rate that we us Crude Oil, we will run out of those fuels ra5ther quickly. We can’t grow and produce those fuels fast enough. Also, we will become so complacent to think that there will be plenty of these fuels that we will begin to use them wastefully. Lastly, it takes fertilizers to replace the nutrients in the soil that these fuel crops will remove from the soil. We are beginning to experience shortages of fertilizers which is causing the price of fertilizers to the farmers. Farmers are going to experience a triple whammy when the price of fertilizers, pesticides, and fuel continue to rise.