The three leading airframe manufacturers agreed to seek collaborative opportunities to speak in unity to government, biofuel producers and other key stakeholders to support, promote and accelerate the availability of sustainable new jet fuel sources.
Embraer President, Commercial Aviation, Paulo Cesar Silva, Boeing Commercial Airplanes President and CEO Jim Albaugh, and Airbus President and CEO Tom Enders signed the agreement at the Air Transport Action Group (ATAG) Aviation and Environment Summit in Geneva.
“We are all committed to take a leading role in the development of technology programs that will facilitate aviation biofuels development and actual application faster than if we were doing it independently,” Paulo Cesar Silva said.
“Few people know that Brazil´s well known automotive biofuels program started within our aeronautical research community, back in the seventies, and we will keep on making history,” he added.
“There are times to compete and there are times to cooperate. Two of the biggest threats to our industry are the price of oil and the impact of commercial air travel on our environment. By working with Airbus and Embraer on sustainable biofuels, we can accelerate their availability and reduce our industry’s impacts on the planet we share,” Jim Albaugh said.
Tom Enders said, “We’ve achieved a lot in the last ten years in reducing our industry’s CO2 footprint – a 45 percent traffic growth with only three percent more fuel consumption. The production and use of sustainable quantities of aviation biofuels is key to meeting our industry’s ambitious CO2 reduction targets and we are helping to do this through Research and Technology, our expanding network of worldwide value chains and supporting the EU commission towards its target of four percent of biofuel for aviation by 2020.”
The collaboration agreement supports the industry’s multi-pronged approach to continuously reduce the industry’s carbon emissions. Continuous innovation, spurred by competitive market dynamics that push each manufacturer to continuously improve product performance, and air traffic modernization, are other critical elements to achieving carbon-neutral growth beyond 2020 and halving industry emissions by 2050 based on 2005 levels.
All three companies are affiliate members of the Sustainable Aviation Fuel Users Group, which includes 23 leading airlines responsible for approximately 25 percent of annual aviation fuel use.