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Airline tests tropical fruit fuel | |
(6 days later) | |
A passenger plane has completed a two-hour test flight partly powered by fuel derived from a tropical fruit. | |
Air New Zealand hailed the flight as a "milestone" in the development of sustainable fuels that could lower aeroplane emissions. | |
One engine of the Boeing 747-400 was fuelled by a 50-50 mixture of jatropha plant oil and standard A1 jet fuel. | |
A Virgin Atlantic test flight in February used fuel derived from a blend of Brazilian babassu nuts and coconuts. | A Virgin Atlantic test flight in February used fuel derived from a blend of Brazilian babassu nuts and coconuts. |
In Auckland on Tuesday, a range of tests were completed both on the ground and during the flight, said Air New Zealand chief pilot David Morgan. | |
He said the oil from the plum-sized jatropha fruit performed "well through both the fuel system and engine". | He said the oil from the plum-sized jatropha fruit performed "well through both the fuel system and engine". |
Air New Zealand chief executive Rob Fyfe said the completion of Tuesday's flight was "a milestone for the airline and commercial aviation". | |
The International Air Transport Association says it wants a 10th of aviation fuel to come from biofuels by 2017. | The International Air Transport Association says it wants a 10th of aviation fuel to come from biofuels by 2017. |
Critics of biofuels are opposed to turning arable land over to the cultivation of biofuels at the expense of growing food. | |
However, the fruit from jatropha trees is toxic to humans and the plant can be grown in poor, marginal soils. | |
But questions have been raised about the plants' suitability as a biofuel because harvesting the fruit is labour intensive and the quality of the yield can be inconsistent. | |
Tuesday's flight was the first time the fuel had been used partly to power an aircraft, but the biodiesel has been used in cars and trains in Asia for a number of years. |
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