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Sustainable Aviation Fuel

LanzaJet first with ethanol-to-SAF at commercial-scale

LanzaJet first with ethanol-to-SAF at commercial-scale
LanzaJet Freedom Pines Fuels is the world's first ethanol-based alcohol-to-jet sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) production plant (photo courtesy LanzaJet).

In the United States (US), LanzaJet, Inc., a leading next-gen fuels technology company and fuels producer, has announced that it has fully operated and produced fuels at its first-of-a-kind LanzaJet Freedom Pines Fuels facility in Soperton, Georgia (GA) – marking both the world’s first production of jet fuel using ethanol as a feedstock at a commercial-scale plant, and the first non-oil-based renewable solution compatible with today’s aircraft.

According to a statement, this achievement marks the culmination of 15 years of research and development, collaboration, investment, and scale-up, including support from the US Department of Energy’s (DOE) Bioenergy Technologies Office (BETO).

It represents a critical breakthrough for the aviation industry with evidence that ethanol can be transformed into jet fuel at a commercial scale.

With the bio-oil HEFA pathway expected to near a plateau in available and qualified feedstocks, LanzaJet’s proprietary Alcohol-to-Jet (ATJ) technology has now unlocked the next wave of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) technology applicable to nearly all regions throughout the world and urgently needed by the sector.

Today proves what happens when you bring together innovation, resilience, ingenuity, and teamwork to think big and develop a new industry, overcome challenges, and enable global growth. This is an important milestone for LanzaJet and our investors, and it’s a major win for global aviation – perhaps serving as a beacon of hope for the future. Our story at LanzaJet is one of impact – building a new industry, creating value, and delivering on our commitments regardless of obstacles in our way. We’re now in a unique position with technology and operational know-how to shape this global industry in the decade ahead, said Jimmy Samartzis, CEO of LanzaJet.

Utilise ethanol feedstocks

One of the most promising technologies in nearly a decade to reach commercial readiness, LanzaJet’s ATJ technology offers a scalable solution to decarbonize aviation, leveraging the world’s widely available ethanol feedstocks and the substantial additional production of ethanol possible from waste sources and recycled carbon.

It provides the opportunity for countries to reinforce and expand their agriculture sectors by accessing this new market, enabling economic development, and enhancing domestic energy security.

Nations can now leverage and control supply chains and domestic production of their fuels with LanzaJet’s breakthrough technology.

Fully integrated first-of-a-kind biorefinery

LanzaJet Freedom Pines Fuels serves as a blueprint for future SAF production, creating a new pathway for global deployment and commercialization of the company’s ATJ technology.

LanzaJet successfully troubleshot and brought into operation a fully integrated first-of-a-kind plant and technology solution.

Included in LanzaJet’s plant are also first-of-a-kind technologies — Technip Energies’ Hummingbird technology, an ethanol-to-ethylene solution, and Oligomerization jointly developed by the US DOE and LanzaTech.

DOE is proud to be a part of this historic milestone, which reinforces America’s leadership in innovative transportation technologies. Achieving the goal of affordable, domestically produced SAF will create more export opportunities and fuel choices, while supporting American farmers and bolstering our energy independence, said Assistant Secretary of Energy (EERE) Audrey Robertson in a separate statement.

LanzaJet invested in, engineered, built, integrated, and fully operationalized these technologies and the overall integrated solution to efficiently operate the plant as the first commercial-scale fuels facility.

LanzaJet’s ATJ technology is designed to work with a broad range of sustainable feedstocks – including agricultural residues, energy crops, municipal solid waste (MSW), and captured carbon – to deliver significant lifecycle greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reductions compared to conventional jet fuel.

Once blended with Jet A‑1 fuel, the result is a fully certified solution compatible with existing aircraft and infrastructure.

Global technology rollout

LanzaJet is delivering this technology throughout the world, including the US, Australia, Japan, India, the UK, Colombia, the EU, the Middle East, and Kazakhstan.

Located in Treutlen County in Soperton, Georgia, and less than 100 miles from Savannah, LanzaJet invested over US$300 million to develop this facility, which employed more than 300 people during construction and has created more than 65 direct and indirect jobs during ongoing operations.

LanzaJet stands as the culmination of a history of firsts within the SAF industry, dating back to its origins as part of LanzaTech in 2012 as the first ethanol-to-SAF technology, which was developed in collaboration with the Pacific Northwest National Lab (PNNL).

That early work enabled lab‑, pilot- and demo-scale plants, production of on-spec fuels, the approval of the ethanol-to-SAF pathway by ASTM in 2016, and the technology’s first commercial flights, which were completed with Virgin Atlantic and All Nippon Airways (ANA) in 2018 and 2019, respectively.

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