Sustainable Aviation Fuel and the Blended Wing Body Revolution

 | Nov 13, 2023 02:04PM ET

A little over a century ago, Captain John Alcock and Lieutenant Arthur Whitten Brown became the first people to make a nonstop, transatlantic flight. Beginning in Newfoundland and ending with a nonfatal crash landing on the west coast of Ireland, the trip took some 16 hours in a World War I bomber, at an average speed of 120 miles per hour.

At the end of this month, if all goes according to plan, history will be made once again when a jet-powered by 100% sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) will cross the Atlantic Ocean for the first time ever. Virgin Atlantic, the British carrier founded by billionaire Richard Branson, received permission from the United Kingdom’s Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) last week to fly from London to New York to test the feasibility of using only green jet fuel on long-haul flights. The demonstration is scheduled for November 28.

h2 The Promising Future of SAF/h2

What is SAF? Advocates tout it as a cleaner alternative to traditional jet fuel, pointing to its ability to reduce CO₂ emissions by up to 80%. Produced from various sources such as waste oils, fats and feedstocks, the fuel is considered “sustainable” because it doesn't compete with food crops or water resources, and it doesn’t cause deforestation.

SAF is currently more expensive to manufacture than conventional kerosene, but as is the case with many other alternative energy technologies, scaling up is key to lowering costs. Take solar energy. The technology was once so prohibitively expensive, that it could only be used on satellites, but in 2020, the International Energy Agency (IEA) proclaimed it the “cheapest electricity in history.”