Aircastle Limited announced that it has invested in the United Airlines Ventures’ Sustainable Flight Fund.
Aircastle joins the 21 other corporate partners from different parts of the aviation supply chain who have committed over $200 million to invest in companies developing technologies for Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) production.
In a release, Mike Inglese, Aircastle’s Chief Executive Officer, said, “SAF has been identified as a primary means by which the aviation segment will progress towards ambitious decarbonization goals. United has been a global leader in SAF investment, and Aircastle is proud to partner with them and the fund’s other investment participants to pledge our support to expand the availability of SAF.”
Also read: Sustainable aviation fuel will take center stage in global aviation decarbonization: Report
In a related press release, Managing Director of United Airlines Ventures, Andrew Chang commented: “SAF is the best tool we have to decarbonize aeroplanes, but we don’t have enough of it. To create the fuel supply we need for our fleet, United recognized that we would have to help build a brand-new industry from scratch – like wind and solar in previous decades. As part of our effort to build a new sustainable aviation ecosystem, we recruited a group of partners with industry expertise to support our startups with financial and strategic capital to help them navigate the entire process from conception to commercialization.”
SAF technology
Velocys, a SAF technology company, recently announced that it has secured $40 million to accelerate its technology, scaling up its production and enhancing the team’s expertise.
Henrik Wareborn, Chief Executive Officer of Velocys, said in a release: “The deal secures the future of Velocys, our pioneering technology and our industry-leading talent, allowing us to keep our foot on the accelerator as we continue to lead the way in innovative sustainable aviation fuel solutions as we enter an inflexion point for our industry. For the past twenty years, Velocys has had a critical role in developing reactors, technology and processes that enable the efficient production of lower carbon SAF, and we and our new partners are excited to see what the next twenty will bring.”
Bioethanol to SAF
On 13 February, Jet Zero Australia signed an agreement with LanzaJet to develop Project Ulysses – a SAF project. It will use LanzaJet’s Alcohol-to-Jet (AtJ) technology that converts bioethanol into SAF and renewable diesel.
In a release, Stephen Forshaw, Airbus Chief Representative, Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific, said, “Australia lacks production of Sustainable Aviation Fuel. The challenge to start production is urgent. If we don’t move soon, the opportunity to build a new fuel industry locally will disappear. However, we think Australia has every chance of becoming a sustainable fuels superpower with the right support from the government and industry. This is why we’re so supportive of Jet Zero’s mission to become Australia’s first home-grown producer of SAF and equally supportive of their partnership with LanzaJet, which will enable production here.”