Sustainability, Clean Energy, Recycling & ESG

Electric Planes Have Limited Use: Biofuels Are The Answer

Jul 22, 2021 2:06:58 PM / by Graham Copley posted in ESG, Hydrogen, Biofuels, decarbonization, Gevo, carbon credit, biofuel, Aemetis, carbon values, electric power, airline industry, energy density, Airbus, sustainable agriculture, low carbon biofuels, carbon-neutral biofuels, waste oil, vegetable oil, fermentation, low carbon fuel

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The decarbonization of the airline industry remains a hot topic. The energy density issue shown in the exhibit below is a correct assessment of why commercial aviation faces a challenge to transition to electric power.  Not only is the energy density too low - which restricts weight/range - but electric power can only turn things, and propellor-based flying has speed limitations relative to jets. The announcements from the airlines to date on electric power have focused on low capacity short-haul opportunities. With this in mind and as noted in the article headlining of the exhibit below, electric power is not the only decarbonizing option for airlines. Hydrogen is the very long-term future - Airbus is saying not before 2050, but in the meantime, the push should be for low carbon or carbon-neutral biofuels. These are essentially plug-in fuels that are identical to current aviation fuel but made either from waste oils or from carbohydrates. Many of the oil majors are working on waste oil or vegetable oil-based processes, especially in California where the LCFS credit helps pay for the conversion, and companies like Gevo and Aemetis are working on carbohydrate-based routes through fermentation. If the carbohydrate, corn in the case of Gevo, is sourced from sustainable agriculture the carbon values of the fuel can be very low and potentially zero or negative through the life cycle. The airlines are going to have to pay up for the low carbon fuel if they want to bid the fuel away from the high credit markets like California diesel and gasoline, but this route could decarbonize the airlines significantly and relatively quickly with the right pricing structure and enough capital. 

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Competition For Renewable Power Likely To Exceed Availability

Jun 23, 2021 1:56:35 PM / by Graham Copley posted in ESG, Sustainability, CCS, CO2, Renewable Power, Electric Vehicles, fossil fuel, carbon footprint, renewable energy, Green Industry, electric power, renewables, power demand, Amazon, carbon cost

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There are several headlines today that speak to one of the most pressing issues that we have with the pace of energy transition – the competition for renewable power and the likely inability of the industry to keep up with the competing needs, let alone do so without significant power cost inflation.

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