Virgin Plane Oil
Posted by Big Gav in biofuel, boeing, virgin atlantic
Cleantech.com is reporting that Virgin plans a test flight of a Boeing Dreamliner next month using some mysterious biofuel that they have developed - no further details available, other than it "doesn't compete with food and fresh water resources", which is encouraging. I'd be guessing its algae based as a first choice, or some sort of biotech based cellulosic ethanol like fuel - either way they'd be way out ahead of the rest of the market if they get this to work.
A Boeing 747 is to fly without passengers between London and Amsterdam. Crawley, England-based Virgin Atlantic said today that it would fly the world's first commercial jet powered by biofuel next month. Ten months ahead of schedule, the test flight will use a Boeing 747 without passengers to fly from London to Amsterdam.
"The demonstration flight next month will give us crucial knowledge that we can use to dramatically reduce our carbon footprint," said Richard Branson, president of Virgin Atlantic, part of the Virgin Group. "Virgin Group pledged to invest all its profits from its transportation companies towards developing clean energy and with this breakthrough we are well down the path to achieving our goals."
The company didn't say what kind of biofuel would be used, only that it doesn't compete with food and fresh water resources. Virgin said the test flight is being run in conjunction with Boeing and GE Aviation.
Last year, the airline ordered 15 Boeing 787 Dreamliners, which it said are up to 60 percent quieter and use nearly 30 percent less fuel than the Airbus A340-300s they'll replace in Virgin Atlantic's fleet. The company has options and purchase rights on another 28 Dreamliners.
Links:
* The Economist - Sugar in the tank
* Scientific American - Virgin biofuelled flight: T-minus one month and counting...