Avoiding SAF Flight Cancellation

Airline Industry, Others Stress Need for Sustainable Aviation Fuels to Take Off

Chris Clayton
By  Chris Clayton , DTN Ag Policy Editor
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Amelia DeLuca, chief sustainability officer for Delta Air Lines, spoke at the Agri-Pulse Food and Policy Summit on Monday. Sustainable aviation fuels (SAF) and the prospects for U.S. biofuels to drive that market were a major focus at the summit. (Airline image courtesy of Delta Air Lines)

WASHINGTON (DTN) -- Airlines and businesses tied to the bioeconomy are stressing how critical the right policies will be to help fully develop a market for sustainable aviation fuels (SAF) that can help create a new market for farmers.

Sustainable aviation fuels were a major focus Monday at the Agri-Pulse Ag & Food Policy Summit. Leaders highlighted the importance of measuring carbon, but also ensuring that the same model used to give SAF producers tax credits also are used for the Renewable Fuel Standard.

"The beauty of where agriculture sits is they hold the keys. You are the above-ground oil wells," said Tim Obitts, CEO of Alder Renewables, which is focused on converting cellulosic residue and woody biomass into jet fuel.

The Biden administration is pushing to see 3 billion gallons of SAF by 2030, which is about 10% of the total aviation fuel market. Aviation groups have committed to getting the industry to "net-zero" carbon emissions by 2050.

The ethanol industry is primed for an alcohol-to-jet conversion, but that will require both tax credits and changes to how EPA scores out corn-based ethanol in the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS).

BEYOND TAX CREDITS

While the SAF tax credits can spur some initial industry investment, SAF advocates said a longer-term need will be to change the way the GREET model is used at the Environmental Protection Agency to generate biofuel renewable identification numbers (RIN) credits at EPA under the RFS. "Tax credits that expire in 2027 cannot serve as an investment signal for building a new industry, which is what we need for alcohol-to-jet," said Alex Menotti, vice president of government affairs, policy and sustainability for Lanza Jet.

Lanza Jet opened a 10-million-gallon, alcohol-to-jet-fuel facility in Georgia earlier this year. To get RIN credits, Lanza Jet began importing ethanol from Brazilian sugarcane.

Menotti said creating jet fuel from ethanol is the most scalable option for the aviation industry, and the best products long term are biofuels from the Midwest. EPA, though, must update its models and lifecycle analysis, which have not changed since 2010. Menotti said policy needs a "turnkey solution" that allows EPA to more rapidly stay current with the latest science.

"EPA needs to update their own rules to recognize the climate benefits for corn ethanol," Menotti said.

Obitts was among those who agreed that Congress needs to update the Renewable Fuel Standard to force some changes in EPA's stance.

"The RFS needs an overhaul. It's outdated. The science has advanced."

AIRLINE POINTS

Amelia DeLuca, chief sustainability officer at Delta Air Lines, told DTN in an interview that she is spending a lot of time in state capitals. States such as Illinois and Minnesota have their own SAF tax credits for fuels produced or used in the state. Last week, DeLuca was in Michigan where she and a farmer testified to the state senate there, advocating for similar incentives. She's also been paying attention to California and New York.

"We think our advocacy is best used right now at the state level and trying to see the extension of the SAF tax credits that we've seen in places like Minnesota and Illinois extended into other Midwestern states as quickly as possible," DeLuca said. "Those are tax credits that are flexible and they're pretty high value. They have a lot of economic development for the states. And it allows us to take this really global conversation and really connect it very locally to the ecosystem."

WAITING ON GREET

Like the biofuels industry, airlines are waiting on the Biden administration to complete the details of changes to the Argonne Greenhouse Gases, Regulated Emissions, and Energy Use in Technologies (GREET) model to allow for clean fuel tax credits for sustainable aviation fuel. The GREET model adjustments are going to be key for determining feedstocks. The GREET update was supposed to be done March 1, but the administration delayed the release.

"We've heard the same messages," DeLuca said about the GREET update. "It's coming pretty soon, and it's going to be good news."

Beyond domestic policy, Obitts warned the U.S. and Europe also are going to increasingly clash over SAF because the EU wants to prohibit using plant-based sugar or corn to produce jet fuels.

CARBON SEQUESTRATION

Carbon capture and sequestration is the biggest lever to pull when it comes to scoring the carbon intensity of using biofuels for jet fuel.

The Midwest has focused heavily on policies to either restrict or incentivize carbon pipelines and sequestration. The U.S. House of Representatives will take up a bill this week that would make it harder for states to block such pipelines.

Patrick Gruber, CEO of Gevo, was among those who also stressed the importance of carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) to lowering the carbon intensity of ethanol going forward.

"CCS matters a lot because you can capture a lot of carbon, put it in the ground, and get it out of the atmosphere."

Menotti noted, "In terms of the industry as a whole, these pipelines are very critical."

FARMERS AND ALTERNATIVE CROPS

Missouri farmer Alan Weber is also a founding partner of MARC-IV, a consulting company focused on developing industrial uses from agricultural feedstocks and waste. Weber said he sees increasing opportunities for farmers to grow crops such as camelina, pennycress and winter canola to produce SAF feedstocks. Farmers would diversify their crop rotations and plant more winter cash crops as a result.

Weber, however, pointed to some challenges with some of these winter crops. They may serve a similar purpose as cover crops, but they don't qualify under USDA conservation programs.

"Those programs could be a boost to helping farmers grow these crops for the first time."

Another hurdle is crop insurance. Harvesting a winter crop such as pennycress in the Midwest would work well for following up with soybeans in spring. "It gives you the opportunity for a full-season soybean crop," Weber said.

Still, USDA's Risk Management Agency views a winter cash crop differently than a cover crop. That ends up affecting the level of crop insurance that could be available to the farmer.

So, right now, some of these potential winter cash crops need policy changes that would help farmers with the risk management options, Weber said. "I think that would go a long way to attracting acres," he said.

DTN ANALYST PERSPECTIVE

DTN Lead Analyst Todd Hultman wasn't at the Agri-Pulse event, but he's been increasingly watching the evolution of SAF policy, which could be critical for farmers going forward as export markets erode.

"Largely due to the aggressive expansion of Brazilian cropland and chronic loss of U.S. export share over the past few decades, farmers are currently facing cash corn prices already trading nearly a dollar a bushel below USDA's estimated cost of production," Hultman noted.

On top of that, farmers face the prospects for potentially the highest 2024-25 ending corn surplus since 1987, if USDA's early projections prove correct.

Hultman added, "An expansion of the domestic biofuels industry is the best hope the American farmer has of restoring demand and profitability to U.S. corn and soybean markets as Brazil has the ability keep expanding its cropland base for decades to come."

The 2021 Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) Grand Challenge has set a goal of 3 billion gallons of SAF by 2030 and 35 billion gallons by 2035. There is not enough corn or soybean surplus to provide a big share of these goals, but keep in mind, 1 billion gallons of SAF can be produced from nearly 600 million bushels of corn, Hultman said.

"Even a small share of this new endeavor would go a long way to easing the current surpluses in corn and soybeans and help restore profitability to U.S. agriculture," Hultman said. "If the SAF requirements are favorable for corn and soybean fuels, we could start to see a positive impact on corn and soybean supplies in two, maybe three years."

Also see "SAF Credits for Biofuels Likely Tied to On-Farm Climate-Smart Practices" here: https://www.dtnpf.com/….

And "Ethanol-to-SAF Plant Grand Opening Lauded as Beginning of New Era in Ag" here: https://www.dtnpf.com/….

Chris Clayton can be reached at Chris.Clayton@dtn.com

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Chris Clayton