Honeywell And Granbio To Produce Carbon-Neutral Sustainable Aviation Fuel
Honeywell and GranBio Technologies announced that they will combine Honeywell’s
ethanol-to-jet (ETJ) technology with GranBio’s cellulosic ethanol AVAP®
technology to produce carbon-neutral sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) from
biomass residues at GranBio’s forthcoming U.S. demonstration plant.
GranBio’s patented AVAP process
converts biomass, including forest and agricultural residues, to pure low-cost,
low-carbon-intensity sugars, lignin, and nanocellulose. The cellulosic sugars
are converted to both SAF, through Honeywell’s ETJ technology, and
biochemicals, through a separate process.
Using forest biomass-derived ethanol
from the AVAP process, jet fuel produced from Honeywell's ethanol-to-jet fuel
process can reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions to net zero on a total
lifecycle basis, compared to petroleum-based jet fuel1.
“Combining our biorefinery expertise
with Honeywell experience in developing and scaling fuel technologies will help
ensure SAF supply goals while supporting GranBio’s mission to provide
integrated value chain solutions throughout the world for net zero SAF from
biomass,” said Bernardo Gradin, GranBio CEO. “The AVAP technology has great
potential, depending on feedstock and plant configuration to allow carbon
negative SAF with current life cycle analysis.1”
“Plus, in addition to vast forest and
agricultural residue available for feedstocks, there is an enormous potential
to retrofit idle pulp and paper facilities in the U.S., revitalizing forestry
value chains and rural manufacturing with great social, environmental, and
economic impact," Gradin added.
“GranBio’s low carbon feedstock
coupled with Honeywell’s SAF expertise will help decarbonize air travel,” said
Barry Glickman, vice president, general manager, Honeywell Sustainable
Technology Solutions. “Our advanced ETJ process is ready-now and builds upon
Honeywell’s near twenty years’ experience in renewable fuels. Honeywell’s
renewable fuels solutions, including ETJ, incorporate integrated, modular
designs, that enable producers like GranBio to build new SAF capacity more than
a year faster than is possible with traditional construction approaches."
GranBio’s AVAP aims to enable
worldwide net zero SAF production by utilizing abundant, low-cost biomass
feedstocks and diversification of income streams through value-added products
beyond SAF, providing significant cost advantage as compared to other SAF
producers.
GranBio’s subsidiary AVAPCO was
selected by the U.S. Department of Energy to receive an $80M grant to support
the demonstration plant that will produce ~2 million gallons per year of SAF
upon start-up in 2026.
Honeywell now offers solutions across a range of feedstocks to meet the rapidly
growing demand for renewable fuels, including SAF. In addition to Honeywell UOP
Ecofining, Honeywell’s renewable fuels portfolio includes ethanol to jet technology and
the recently announced Honeywell UOP eFining, which converts
green hydrogen and carbon dioxide into eFuels.
Honeywell recently
committed to achieve carbon neutrality in its operations and facilities by
2035. This commitment builds
on the company’s track record of sharply reducing the greenhouse gas intensity
of its operations and facilities as well as its decades-long history of
innovation to help its customers meet their environmental and social goals.
About 60% of Honeywell’s 2022 new product introduction research and development
investment was directed toward ESG-oriented outcomes for customers.
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