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Australian-made green plane fuel closer with grant win

Australian-made green plane fuel closer with grant win

Perth Now24-07-2025
Forget farm waste: Australian researchers are developing a way to make environmentally friendly aviation fuel using renewable energy, water and carbon dioxide.
The innovative project, undertaken at the University of NSW, has won a $1.2 million grant to progress the technology and scientists say a prototype could be as little as six months from launch.
The announcement on Thursday comes amid increasing demand for sustainable aviation fuel in Australia and worldwide and follows the launch of several multimillion-dollar projects designed to turn waste into jet fuel.
Sustainable aviation fuel, or SAF, is typically made from agricultural waste such as sugarcane, tallow, canola and cooking oils and can reduce emissions from aircraft by 80 per cent compared to traditional jet fuel.
But the UNSW project deploys an electrolyser that uses low-cost metals, carbon catalysts and renewable energy to turn carbon dioxide and water into fuel precursors.
The approach could cut out the need for farm waste and make environmentally friendly fuel easier to produce at scale, project leader Rahman Daiyan said.
"Most of the work so far has been on bio-based sustainable aviation fuel projects," he told AAP.
"But those sort of biomass resources are limited to some extent."
The Trailblazer for Recycling and Clean Energy program, established by the federal education department, has awarded the UNSW research team an additional $1.2 million to scale up its technology.
While the electrolyser has been proven to work in a lab, Dr Daiyan said a validated prototype would be ready within six to nine months, and the project would be commercialised with industry partners Tjindu Power and Chinese energy firm Chuangqi Times.
If successful, he said, the project could help to realise Australian ambitions to become a green fuel exporter.
"One of the best aspects of this technology is that it allows us to leverage Australia's potential – we want to be a hydrogen exporter or a low-carbon fuel exporter," Dr Daiyan said.
"There is domestic demand but there is also overseas demand because apart from Singapore and Malaysia there are not a lot of places to make SAF for the Asia Pacific region."
Sustainable aviation fuel is considered to be one of the leading ways to reduce carbon emission from air travel and is in high demand worldwide after major airlines committed to using the fuel to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050.
A report by the CSIRO and aircraft maker Boeing, released in November, found Australia could lead the world in production of the sustainable fuel but warned it had made only moderate progress so far.
Sustainable aviation fuel projects are under way in Queensland and Western Australia, including a refinery planned by Wagner Sustainable Fuels and plans to transform BP's Kwinana Energy Hub in Western Australia.
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MORE: Australia isn't ready for EVs, says Suzuki distributor boss MORE: Suzuki Vitara electric, hybrid SUVs locked in for Australia MORE: Suzuki Jimny EV 'would ruin' pint-sized 4×4 – executive MORE: Everything Suzuki Content originally sourced from: As Suzuki Australia gears up to launch its first-ever electric vehicle (EV) in 2026, the brand's local boss says hybrids will continue to dominate over EVs in the coming years. The company's general manager, Michael Pachota, says Suzuki Australia's "electrification journey is starting", just as the federal government's New Vehicle Efficiency Standard (NVES) begins to fine auto brands which fail to meet tightening CO2 limits across their model ranges from July 1, 2025. "We accelerated that journey as well. So Suzuki Motor Corporation kindly gave us the opportunity to bring in an E-vehicle sooner rather than later based on, obviously, pressures around emissions controls and stuff like that," he told CarExpert. "I think as you can see with the current sales growth in all those areas where there's mild, strong, plug-in [hybrids] or even EVs, I think there's an opportunity for evolution in the Australian market. "I think hybrid itself is the shift. That's where it's going to go. I think in the next decade, you're going to see a complete shift from [internal combustion] engines to hybrid powertrains and a slightly larger percentage of EV sales." CarExpert can save you thousands on a new car. Click here to get a great deal. The first model released by Suzuki Australia with hybrid badging was the Swift Hybrid launched in June 2024, which features a 12-volt mild-hybrid system. A similar 12V system now also features in the Fronx Hybrid light SUV launched last month. Unlike more traditional hybrids from brands like Toyota, these mild-hybrid models don't have an electric motor that can drive the vehicle's wheels alone. 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The Jimny is Suzuki Australia's best-selling model by far, more than doubling the sales of the second-placed Swift so far this year. In any case, Mr Pachota says Suzuki Australia will be focusing on its rollout of hybrid vehicles, even if they are mild-hybrids. At the same time, he claims the brand is "very prepared" to "adapt and evolve" to the NVES. "I definitely see [hybrid] as a shift. In Japan, we already offer mild- and strong-hybrid vehicles. We're about to introduce a fully electric vehicle, which is our first fully electric vehicle, eVitara, and it doesn't end there," he told CarExpert. "So I definitely see that space growing. Hybrid's definitely a focus point for us." MORE: Australia isn't ready for EVs, says Suzuki distributor boss MORE: Suzuki Vitara electric, hybrid SUVs locked in for Australia MORE: Suzuki Jimny EV 'would ruin' pint-sized 4×4 – executive MORE: Everything Suzuki Content originally sourced from:

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The race discrimination commissioner has called on the government to pass changes to the Racial Discrimination Act that would require companies to safeguard against racism in the workplace, saying it was costing the Australian economy $37 billion a year. The Albanese government amended the Sex Discrimination Act in 2022, in line with recommendations from the Australian Human Rights Commission, introducing new 'positive duty' rules that shifted the onus for employers from responding to complaints to preventing harassment.

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