United Airlines Taps Corn to Bring Ethanol-Based Jet Fuel to Market

United Airlines is teaming up with a corn ethanol maker in a bid to ramp up production of green jet fuel to deal with carbon credits and climate change by 2028.

Corn Harvest - Poet Ethanol Plant - By Lindsey Pound 2022
Corn Harvest - Poet Ethanol Plant - By Lindsey Pound 2022
(Lindsey Pound)

United Airlines is teaming up with a corn ethanol maker in a bid to ramp up production of green jet fuel to deal with carbon credits and climate change.

United Airlines Holdings Inc., biofuels producer Green Plains Inc. and energy infrastructure firm Tallgrass Energy Partners LP are jointly investing up to $50 million to form Blue Blade Energy. The venture seeks to bring to market technology that would simplify making sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) from ethanol and other alcohol-based ingredients, also known as feedstocks.

Read more: DOE Cuts $118 Million Check to Biofuels Projects

United plans to buy as many as 2.7 billion gallons of the fuel, its biggest SAF agreement by volume, as the airline works to reach net zero emissions by 2050. The venture centers around the idea that ethanol will beat out other commodities, like vegetable oil, as a preferred ingredient for making green jet fuel.

“The trouble with SAF is the lack of feedstock,” United Airlines Ventures President Michael Leskinen said in an interview with Bloomberg. Blue Blade “has the potential to be very consequential in moving the needle in how much SAF is actually produced in the United States.”

Trial Plans

The initial investment is for testing development. If that’s a success, then hundreds of millions in financing would be needed to build an initial production plant, according to Leskinen. The next step would be to build a test plant in 2024, followed by a facility that could start operating by 2028.

Read more: Are Landlocked Soybean Crush Facilities Destined to Survive?

The offtake agreement could provide for enough SAF to fly more than 50,000 flights annually between United’s hub airports in Chicago and Denver.

The Biden administration has challenged refiners and others in the supply chain to boost production of SAF to 3 billion gallons a year as part of an effort to cut aviation emissions 20% by 2030.

The global aviation industry accounts for about 3% of the gases warming the planet today, though the sector’s emissions are rising fast.

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