High costs and limited availability of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) impede Mexico's ability to reach its goal of net zero emissions in the aviation industry, according to participants at the first SAF seminar in the country.
By 2050, SAF could represent 50-70pc of the CO2 reductions in global air transportation, Guillaume Gressin, AirBus vice president of international, strategy and commercial operations, said during the sustainable air-fuels seminar organized by Mexico's Secretariat of Infrastructure, Communications and Transportation, through the Federal Civil Aviation Agency and Airports and Auxiliary Services .
Yet, the higher cost of SAF versus traditional jet fuel and the low availability of the product in Latin America are serious obstacles that need to be addressed urgently, seminar participants said.
Other options to reduce emissions in aviation include improving efficiency in operations and infrastructure and reducing the industry's carbon footprint through reforestation, among others, Gressin added.
Seminar participants agreed that under current circumstances, SAF is the key technology to achieve the 2050 net zero goal set by the International Air Transport Association (IATA) in accordance with the Paris climate agreement.
Aviation is responsible for 2-3pc of global CO2 emissions, and would eventually represent 20pc if no change is enforced, Charlote Lollar, manager of renewable aviation at Neste, the largest global producer of SAF said.
Neste expects initial production of 30mn USG of SAF this year, jumping to roughly 500mn USG next year.
Global production targets are highly ambitious, as the World Economic Forum has set a goal to build 300-400 SAF plants by 2030.
"And given the plants take five years to be built, we need to make the decisions and make the investments in the next 18-24 months," said Laia Barbara, community lead for the World Economic Forum's Clean Skies for Tomorrow initiative.
To achieve that, an intermediate goal is to invest $6bn-8bn in SAF plants globally by 2025 and increase that investment to $25bn-35bn by 2030, Barbara said.
An SAF plant requires $500mn-$1bn of investments, according to World Economic Forum estimates.
Latin America could attract a good portion of those investments, but regulations and investment assurances need to be in place soon to secure SAF production in the region, Lollar said.
In Mexico, private airline Volaris only has 0.1pc of SAF fuel supply in the airports where the company operates, mainly in Mexico and the US, Mario Geyne, senior fleet director of Volaris said.
Furthermore, SAF costs in Mexico are two to three times higher than conventional jet fuel on average, an outstanding challenge for airlines that are still recovering from the financially difficult pandemic, according to Lollar.