Journal article
Aviation CO2 emissions reductions from the use of alternative jet fuels
Energy policy, Vol.114, pp.342-354
03/2018
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/2376/120343
Appears in Aviation Sustainability Center (ASCENT)
Abstract
Although a relatively small contributor to annual anthropogenic CO2 emissions (~2.6%), commercial aviation activity is growing at ~5% per annum. As a result, alternative jet fuel (AJF) technologies have garnered interest as a means to achieve large, near-term emissions reductions for the industry. This analysis quantifies the potential for AJF to reduce aviation's CO2 emissions by assessing: the availability of AJF feedstock; AJF volumes that could be produced from that feedstock; the lifecycle emissions of AJF compared to petroleum-derived jet fuel; and the number of bio-refineries and capital investment required to achieve the calculated emission reductions. We find that, if the use of AJF is to reduce aviation's lifecycle GHG emissions by 50% or more by 2050, prices or policies will have to significantly incentivize the production of bioenergy and waste feedstocks, and AJF production will need to be prioritized over other potential uses of these resources. Reductions of 15% by 2050 would require construction of ~60 new bio-refineries annually (similar to growth in global biofuel production capacity in the early 2000s), and capital investment of ~12 billion USD2015 per year (~1/5 of annual capital investment in petroleum refining).
•Alternative jet fuel (AJF) could contribute to aviation industry CO2e reductions.•Significant feedstock & AJF production incentives needed for 50% reduction by 2050.•15% reduction requires ~60 new bio-refineries and ~$12b CapEx per year, globally.•Aviation's CO2 reduction goals will likely require offsets from other industries.
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Details
- Title
- Aviation CO2 emissions reductions from the use of alternative jet fuels
- Creators
- Mark D Staples - Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyRobert Malina - Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyPooja Suresh - Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyJames I Hileman - Federal Aviation AdministrationSteven R.H Barrett - Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Publication Details
- Energy policy, Vol.114, pp.342-354
- Academic Unit
- Aviation Sustainability Center (ASCENT); Alternative Jet Fuel
- Publisher
- Elsevier Ltd
- Grants
- 13-C-AJFE-MIT-03, Federal Aviation Administration (United States, Washington) - FAA13-C-AJFE-MIT-12, Federal Aviation Administration (United States, Washington) - FAA13-C-AJFE-MIT-16, Federal Aviation Administration (United States, Washington) - FAA13-C-AJFE-MIT-28, Federal Aviation Administration (United States, Washington) - FAA
- Identifiers
- 99900620466701842
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article