Wednesday, July 31, 2024

Airlines' climate goals are up in the air

Has the industry jettisoned net zero?

Today's newsletter looks at how one airline's dumped climate goal may open the door for others in the industry to follow. You can read the full story on Bloomberg.com. For unlimited access to climate and energy news, please subscribe

Up in the air 

By Angus Whitley

Air New Zealand Ltd.'s decision to ditch its 2030 emissions target suggests more airlines will also have to confront a harsh reality: There's simply not enough sustainable fuel or new, more-efficient aircraft.

This double-whammy has left the world's commercial carriers, among the planet's biggest polluters, without their two best decarbonization weapons. Global supply of sustainable aviation fuel will be just 0.5% of total fuel requirements this year, according to the International Air Transport Association.

At the same time, Boeing Co. and Airbus SE can't make jets fast enough. Boeing, under pressure from regulators, has slowed output to improve quality. Airbus is so stretched it's even turning down orders. So while next-generation jets can consume 15%-20% less fuel, wait times to get them delivered are years long.

It all means airlines like Air New Zealand have to fly older and dirtier planes for longer, while finding it almost impossible to fill them up with clean-burning fuel. The fact that SAF can be several times more expensive than conventional jet fuel doesn't make it any easier for carriers to hit near-term carbon targets.

Other airlines struggling to buy enough sustainable fuel may have to follow Air New Zealand's example, said Jack Shepherd, Sydney-based sustainable fuels manager at Blunomy, an energy-transition consulting company.

The fallout from such decisions would extend far beyond the next decade. If more airlines scrap interim emissions goals, fuel suppliers will be even less likely to invest in SAF production, said Shepherd. At worst, aviation's mid-century goal of carbon neutrality also disappears from reach, he said.

"If we're not on track in 2030, then the 2050 goal is going to be hard to achieve," he said. "When the general public is calling for a decarbonized world, it puts pressure on these airlines and their social license to operate."

The widespread production of SAF has been slowed by high costs, limited feedstock and patchy policy support. Much of the small volumes available are being produced in the US and Europe.

Air New Zealand had wanted to cut carbon intensity by 28.9% by 2030 from a 2019 baseline, and has now begun work on a new near-term target. It still aims to hit net zero by mid-century.

The Auckland-based company may be one of the first airlines to publicly abandon an interim climate goal, but rumblings about whether aviation's targets can be hit have been getting louder.

Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd. said this month that the enormity of the task had become clear, following talks with about 50 potential suppliers. "We have really witnessed how difficult it is for the SAF industry to take off," Grace Cheung, Cathay's general manager of sustainability, said in an interview.

SAF, made from waste fats or agricultural feedstock, could cut emissions by almost 80% if it fully replaces jet kerosene, according to airlines. They're betting their sustainable future on SAF because other fuel sources such as hydrogen or electric batteries remain far from commercialization.

But even with aviation's commitment to SAF, IATA in June cut its estimates for total SAF production in 2030 after finding that many projects were behind schedule. IATA, which represent more than 300 airlines worldwide, said output had to increase by a factor of 1,000 by 2050.

When it comes to cutting emissions, it's time for airlines to acknowledge the limits of what's possible, according to Emirates President Tim Clark.

"We've got to have a grown-up conversation about what is achievable," Clark said in an interview at the Farnborough Air Show this month. "We shouldn't give up on it. We should just inject a sanity check."

Read the full story here

Air traffic control

25,000
This is about how many planes are in the world's commercial fleet. Neutralizing the carbon emissions of all of them will be an expensive endeavor.

Can it be done?

"That sounds like it's really almost not possible, but the thing is the world has achieved these types of challenges many times over in the past."
Marie Owens Thomsen
IATA chief economist 
IATA says the airline industry can achieve its SAF goals with strong and urgent public policy support.

More from Green

One of the most comprehensive aerial surveys of methane gushing from US oil and gas facilities shows operators must slash emissions by roughly 80% or more to meet major industry targets. 

The nonprofit Environmental Defense Fund conducted about 30 flights between June and October of last year over fossil fuel basins that account for nearly three-quarters of onshore oil and gas production in the contiguous US. On average, the data collected show that around 1.6% of gross gas production is released as methane into the atmosphere. That's about eight times higher than what many operators have pledged to reach by 2030 or earlier in a bid to limit their emissions under programs including the Oil and Gas Climate Initiative and the Oil & Gas Decarbonization Charter. 

The UK confirms its green power budget. The UK will allocate a record £1.5 billion ($1.9 billion) to support new renewable power capacity in an upcoming auction, a crucial step as the government works to eliminate carbon emissions from its grid. 

Africa-focused funds target $600 million. Helios Investment Partners LLP and Gaia Fund Managers are raising hundreds of millions of dollars for Africa-focused climate funds to invest in renewable energy and drought-resistant agriculture on the continent.

Calls grow for climate risk reporting. The International Accounting Standards Board is urging companies to disclose climate-related risks in their balance sheets and income statements, representing a key shift from existing norms.

Heat watch

By Olivia Rudgard

On Sunday, July 21, the world had its hottest day on record. Just 24 hours later, that record broke again making last Monday very likely the hottest day in thousands of years. It may seem improbable for scientists to gauge the world's hottest day given that they don't have temperature monitors in every corner of the world and less than a century of relatively widespread observations. But they've developed a technique that's increasingly useful as the planet heats up. 

This month's shocking heat findings, announced by the EU's Copernicus Climate Change Service, are based on "reanalysis," a technique that mixes temperature data and models to provide a global view of the climate. 

This technique isn't just useful for making "hottest day ever" announcements: It's being used to train AI forecasting models, help homeowners work out how much energy their solar panels might generate, and assist utilities planning where to put wind farms. 

A Times Square Alliance public safety officer wipes away sweat amid high temperatures in New York in June 2024. Photographer: Adam Gray/Bloomberg

In other weather news:

Europe: Barcelona recorded its hottest ever day — 40C (104F) — as a heat wave engulfs Spain, while London saw its highest temperature (32C) so far this year.

Olympics: The Seine has finally been declared safe for Olympic triathlon events. There was previously concern about water quality following recent streak of rainy days, which can cause the sewage system to overflow, bringing waste water and bacteria into the Seine. 

US: Heat advisories and the more serious excessive heat warnings are up across the Midwest and South. In Cairo, Illinois, temperatures will reach 96F but feel like 111F Wednesday, the National Weather Service said.

India: The deadly floods triggered by heavy rains in the southern Indian state of Kerala this week were the latest in a streak of disasters that could have been avoided through better planning, according to experts.

New data: Natural catastrophes caused about $62 billion of insured losses in the first half of 2024 — roughly 70% above the 10-year average — as extreme wildfires, droughts and floods upend historical norms. 

--With assistance from Brian K Sullivan

Worth a listen

To meet the demands of a net zero future BloombergNEF analysis estimates that the world will need to nearly double its grid network to 111 million kilometers — a distance almost three quarters of the way to the sun — by 2050. How will we get there?  Former BNEF grid expert Sanjeet Sanghera, a one-time control room operator who is now working on strategic futures at the National Grid, tells Akshat Rathi about the challenges and opportunities this enormous transformation of the world's biggest machine will bring. Listen now, and subscribe on Apple or Spotify to get new episodes of Zero every Thursday.

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