Sustainable Aviation Fuel: What Pilots Need to Know

SAF: The Fuel Changing Aviation

Sustainable Aviation Fuel is the aviation industry's primary near-term strategy for reducing carbon emissions. As a pilot, understanding SAF is becoming as important as understanding jet fuel specifications. Here is what you need to know.

What Is SAF?

SAF is jet fuel produced from sustainable feedstocks rather than fossil petroleum. It is chemically similar to conventional Jet A/A-1 and requires no aircraft modifications.

SAF Production Pathways

PathwayFeedstockCarbon ReductionMaturity
HEFA (Hydroprocessed Esters and Fatty Acids)Used cooking oil, animal fats50-80%Commercial
Fischer-Tropsch (FT)Biomass, municipal waste50-95%Commercial
Alcohol-to-Jet (ATJ)Ethanol, isobutanol40-70%Commercial
Power-to-Liquid (PtL)Water + CO2 + renewable electricityUp to 100%Early commercial
DSHC (Direct Sugar to Hydrocarbons)Sugarcane, sugar beet50-70%Pilot scale

Operational Impact for Pilots

Does SAF Affect Aircraft Performance?

ParameterImpactNotes
Engine performanceNoneSAF is a drop-in fuel
RangeSlightly improvedSAF is marginally more energy-dense
Fuel flowIdenticalNo adjustment needed
ProceduresNo changeSame fueling, same operations
Cold weather performanceImprovedBetter freeze point characteristics
Emissions (non-CO2)ReducedLess particulate matter and SOx

Current SAF Blending Limits

SAF is currently certified for use as a blend with conventional jet fuel:

StandardMaximum SAF BlendAuthority
ASTM D756650%International standard
ASTM D7566 Annex A750% (100% target by 2030)In development

Important: Pilots do not need to know the SAF percentage in their fuel. The fueling process is transparent -- SAF/conventional blends meet the same Jet A-1 specification.

Regulatory Mandates

JurisdictionSAF MandateTimeline
European Union (ReFuelEU)2% by 2025, 6% by 2030, 70% by 2050In force
United Kingdom10% by 2030In force
United States3 billion gallons by 2030 (voluntary target)Incentive-based
Singapore1% by 2026, 3-5% by 2030In development
Japan10% by 2030In development

Cost and Availability

Price Premium

Fuel TypeApproximate Cost (2026)Premium vs Jet A
Conventional Jet A$2.50/gallonBaseline
SAF (HEFA blend)$5.00-$7.00/gallon100-180% more
SAF (PtL)$8.00-$15.00/gallon220-500% more

Availability

In 2026, SAF represents approximately 0.3% of global jet fuel supply. Key availability points:

  • Los Angeles (LAX) -- Regular SAF supply through airport hydrant system
  • San Francisco (SFO) -- Regular SAF supply
  • London Heathrow (LHR) -- Growing SAF deliveries
  • Amsterdam Schiphol (AMS) -- Regular supply
  • Singapore Changi (SIN) -- Regular supply

Environmental Impact

Carbon Lifecycle

SAF reduces carbon emissions on a lifecycle basis because:

  1. The feedstock (plants, waste) absorbed CO2 during its life
  2. When burned, SAF releases CO2 that was recently captured (not ancient fossil carbon)
  3. Net lifecycle reduction: 50-100% depending on the pathway

Non-CO2 Benefits

SAF also reduces:

  • Particulate matter by up to 90% (reducing contrail formation)
  • Sulfur oxides (SOx) -- virtually eliminated
  • Contrails -- Potentially significant because fewer particles mean fewer ice crystals

Contrail reduction may be the most significant near-term climate benefit, as contrails contribute an estimated 50% of aviation's total climate impact.

What Pilots Should Know Operationally

  1. No operational difference -- SAF blends meet the same fuel specification as conventional Jet A
  2. No performance calculation changes -- Use the same performance data as always
  3. Fuel contamination -- Same testing requirements as conventional fuel
  4. NOTAM awareness -- Some airports may issue NOTAMs regarding SAF availability
  5. Fuel planning -- No changes required to fuel planning procedures

The Industry Perspective

Airline SAF Commitments

AirlineSAF TargetInvestment
United Airlines100% SAF capable by 2050$200M+ in SAF ventures
Delta Air Lines10% SAF by 2030SAF production partnerships
Lufthansa GroupMeeting EU mandates + voluntary programsSAF purchase agreements
Air France-KLM10% SAF by 2030€1B+ committed

Why Airlines Are Investing

  • Regulatory compliance (EU mandates are legally binding)
  • Customer demand (corporate travel contracts increasingly require carbon reporting)
  • Carbon offset costs (SAF is more credible than offsets)
  • Future-proofing (anticipating global mandates)

The Bottom Line

SAF is not a theoretical concept -- it is flying in aircraft today, and pilots interact with it regularly at major airports. While the price premium and limited supply remain challenges, the trajectory is clear: SAF usage will grow significantly over the next decade. Pilots do not need to change any operational procedures, but understanding SAF demonstrates the professional awareness that airlines and examiners appreciate.

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