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posted by CoolHand on Tuesday November 15 2016, @08:27PM   Printer-friendly
from the if-a-tree-falls-in-the-forest-can-i-join-the-mile-high-club dept.

Washington state-based Alaska Airlines today made history flying the first commercial flight using the world's first renewable, alternative jet fuel made from forest residuals, the limbs and branches that remain after the harvesting of managed forests.

The fuel used a 20 percent blend of sustainable aviation biofuel.

While 20% doesn't seem like much (it's still 80% aviation fuel), if the airline were able to replace 20 percent of its entire fuel supply at Sea-Tac Airport (from which it took off), it would reduce greenhouse gas emissions by about 142,000 metric tons of CO2. This is equivalent to taking approximately 30,000 passenger vehicles off the road for one year.


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  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Tuesday November 15 2016, @11:51PM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday November 15 2016, @11:51PM (#427282) Journal

    The air force was paying like $30/gal for biofuel some years back.

    Now you can't guarantee that the delta between $5 and $30 is entirely and solely energy

    I think that the USAF would be lucky that the biofuel was biofuel. But sure, if you're spending that much, then a lot of strategies for making renewable fuel would work.