Engine, fuel, flight route: How can air traffic become more climate-friendly?

Flying should be climate-neutral in the future.

Engine, fuel, flight route: How can air traffic become more climate-friendly?

Flying should be climate-neutral in the future. However, the ambitious goal of the federal government is not so easy to implement. Because it is about more than the climate-damaging emissions of the aircraft.

Flying is the most climate-damaging type of travel. Many people now feel shame when using airplanes, which has even become its own term with "flight shame". A broad alliance of research, industry, business and politics wants to make flying more climate-friendly in the future. The current federal government is even aiming for climate-neutral flying as a long-term goal. But there is a long way to go until then.

According to a study from 2020, global air traffic contributes around 3.5 percent to global warming. The carbon dioxide (CO2) produced by the combustion of the aviation fuel kerosene accounts for around 1.5 percent. The influence of so-called non-CO2 effects is noticeably larger with a contribution of 2 percent - and was mostly neglected in earlier considerations.

Of the non-CO2 effects, the generation of cirrus clouds from aircraft engine exhaust streams is the most significant factor. It is true that the cirrus clouds reflect part of the sunlight, which therefore does not penetrate to earth. However, the clouds also reflect the thermal radiation that emanates from the ground, mainly at night and in the morning hours, thus contributing to global warming. And this effect is the bigger one.

Scientists from the German Aerospace Center (DLR) were involved in the study, which was published in the journal "Atmospheric Environment". Markus Fischer, Head of Aviation at DLR, currently sees good opportunities for rapid development towards more climate-friendly aviation: "The aviation crisis resulting from the corona pandemic is now proving to be beneficial to a certain extent," says Fischer. In his opinion, without the sharp decline in air traffic, it would have been much more difficult to initiate the rethinking process necessary for climate protection.

The current federal government is pushing for rapid action and has founded the "working group on climate-neutral aviation". The member of the Bundestag Anna Christmann (Greens), as the federal government's coordinator for German aerospace, invited to the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Protection (BMWK) in November. The host was also the Parliamentary State Secretary at the Federal Ministry for Digital Affairs and Transport (BMDV), Oliver Luksic. Representatives came from industry, business and research, from trade unions, environmental and other associations as well as from civil society. "It's important to join forces now and push the development processes forward more quickly," emphasizes Christmann.

One of the working groups set up at the first working group meeting deals with sustainable fuels. Although, in the long term, types of propulsion other than turbines are to be increasingly used to burn kerosene, greenhouse gas emissions must also be reduced in the short term. This can be done by using other sources instead of fossil oil to produce kerosene. One possibility is the "Power to Liquid" process: Hydrogen is generated with climate-neutral, "green" electricity and synthetic gas is artificially produced with CO2, which is extracted from industrial exhaust gases or the air; this can then be processed into kerosene.

Biological waste can also be source materials. Carbon is stored in them, which was taken from the air during the growth of plants and animals. If this carbon is released again as CO2 during combustion, the CO2 content of the air does not increase - at least when viewed for decades. This is where the "Bio to Liquid" and "Waste to Liquid" projects come in (biowaste to liquid, waste to liquid), in which the almost 100-year-old Fischer-Tropsch process is used.

In the "Care-O-Sene" project, which will run until 2025, the Fischer-Tropsch synthesis is to be improved in such a way that climate-neutral kerosene can be produced on a large scale. The project leaders are Dirk Schär, manager at the South African chemical and energy group Sasol, and Tobias Sontheimer, senior researcher at the Helmholtz Center Berlin. "Three aspects determine the project goal: the economics of the processes, the preparation for mass production and the efficiency of the synthesis," explains Sontheimer. The kerosene yield of the Fischer-Tropsch synthesis step is currently around 50 percent: only half of the raw materials used to produce a fuel are contained in the fuel as usable energy. With the development of new catalysts, the efficiency should be increased to more than 80 percent.

Synthesis is further down the process chain for climate-neutral kerosene production. "If we optimize this process, then we need less energy in the previous processes," explains Schär. Because even if the energy comes from renewable sources, it is more sustainable and economical to use less energy. The project leaders are confident that the new catalysts will work well. Nevertheless, they are also researching thin-film catalytic processes that could bring further improvements in the long term and lead to a CO2-neutral circular economy.

In aviation, innovation cycles are usually assumed to be 10 to 20 years. With "Care-O-Sene" there should be a usable result after three years. "We do many things in parallel, and the production facilities are already being planned," explains Schär. And Sontheimer adds: "We have no alternative, we have to act quickly now." The EU Commission would like to promote the market for SAF (sustainable aviation fuels - sustainable aviation fuels) by prescribing an increase in the admixture of SAF to conventional kerosene from two percent (2025) to 63 percent (2050); however, the figures are still disputed.

The second working group in the climate-neutral aviation working group deals with new technologies in commercial aviation. This doesn't just mean drive technologies, but also the massive reduction in internal energy consumption through aerodynamic measures and lightweight system construction. As with other means of transport, there are essentially three types of propulsion: electric, hydrogen-powered, liquid fuel-powered. Electric propulsion is only an option for short distances or small aircraft; today's battery technology doesn't offer much more, says DLR board member Fischer. Hybrid electric drives, for example in combination with a hydrogen-powered fuel cell, could possibly also work for medium-sized aircraft.

There are two approaches to hydrogen fuel: electricity generation in fuel cells and direct combustion in engines. However, hydrogen is difficult to transport: it either has to be liquefied at minus 253 degrees or stored at a pressure of up to 700 bar, around 700 times the atmospheric pressure. Climate-friendly kerosene, on the other hand, is easy to transport. That is why there are already considerations to produce it in areas where a particularly large amount of solar and wind energy can be generated. Because for many medium-haul and all long-haul routes, it is not yet clear how kerosene-powered drives could be replaced.

For shorter distances, sustainable aircraft are being worked on worldwide - the management consultancy Roland Berger counted 300 corresponding projects in 2021. Aircraft with purely electric propulsion make up 61 percent of the development volume, those with hybrid-electric propulsion 32 percent and those with hydrogen propulsion seven percent. As an example, MEP Christmann refers to the German startup Volocopter, which develops electrically powered vertical take-off aircraft and cargo drones, and to H2Fly, which is working on fuel cell technology with the first successful test flights. The big corporations also take development risks. Airbus is working on a hydrogen-powered aircraft that should be ready for the market in 2035.

For DLR Divisional Director Fischer, the research does not end with the drives. Because the non-CO2 effects have such a major impact on the climate, his scientists are also devoting themselves to optimizing flight routes: "The cirrus clouds only form where it is very cold and at the same time very humid," explains Fischer. These areas are now well defined. If a pilot receives a message in good time, he can fly around the affected airspace in consultation with air traffic control. Since around 80 percent of the formation of cirrus clouds from contrails is caused by just ten percent of global air traffic, Fischer is convinced that a significant effect can be achieved here for climate protection.

Flight route optimization is also the main topic of the third working group in the climate-neutral aviation working group. The initiator of the working group, Christmann, also mentions other aspects, especially climate-neutral airports. Because many things are easier to make climate-friendly on the ground than in the air. For example, the green ground power at German airports will make it possible to supply stationary aircraft with energy; so far, the engines often have to run. Entire airports could be redesigned to be climate-friendly, powered by solar power generated between the runways. "The airports are already on the right track," says Christmann.

Many different measures are intended to reduce the carbon footprint of flying. In this way, pilots could use the gliding flight more when approaching and less the turbines, Fischer cites another example. The players are not counting on the big technological breakthrough, but on numerous smaller and larger steps towards climate-neutral flying. "Every technology and every measure that is researched has its justification," emphasizes Helmholtz researcher Sontheimer.