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PRIVACY
Tech

Sustainable aviation fuel project for Port Talbot secures £25m funding boost

The project from LanzaTech promises to create hundreds of new jobs

LanzTech has developed technology to produce sustainable aviation fuel from off-gases produced from steel production.;(Image: Richard Williams Photography)

Plans for a factory in Port Talbot creating hundreds of new green jobs in the production of commercial scale sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) from gases produced in the making of steel, has secured a £25m funding boost. US firm LanzaTech, which is behind the project, is amongst five recipients across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ sharing £165m under the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government’s Advanced Fuel Fund.

The fund forms part of effort to reach the 2050 net carbon zero target and supporting the decarbonisation of the aviation sector. LanzaTech, which has been working with Neath Port Talbot Council and Tata Steel- through its primary steel making plant in the town - for a number of years has developed technology converting steel mill off-gases into ethanol that is then used as an SAF.

The company’s Project Dragon factory is scheduled to become operational in 2026, creating hundreds of green jobs and producing 79,000 tonnes of SAT when at full capacity.

Jennifer Holmgren, chief executive of LanzaTech, said: “The Advanced Fuels Fund competition from the Department for Transport shows real leadership in validating new technologies that can have a real impact globally and we’re excited that Project Dragon has been recognised for its potential to deliver results and create new jobs while producing the volumes of SAF greatly needed by a sector that has limited options today.

We must accelerate deployment of SAF plants in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and by working together, we can show the world what is possible, and I thank the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Department for Transport for its continued support.”

Transport Secretary Mark Harper said: “Using waste or by-products to refuel airliners sounds like a flight of fancy, but thanks to £165m of government funding it’s going to help us make guilt-free flying a reality. It’s exactly this kind of innovation that will help us create thousands of green jobs across the country and slash our carbon emissions.”

The other SAF projects backed include new plants in Teesside, Immingham and Ellesmere Port. Together they are forecast to create thousands of green jobs using different methods in the production of creating SAF - including from everyday household waste. Combined they are expected to reduce CO2 emissions by an average of 200,000 tonnes each year once fully operational– the equivalent of taking 100,000 cars off the road.

Launched alongside the Jet Zero Strategy in the summer, the Advanced Fuel Fund is designed to support the Westminster government’s vision for the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ to become a world leader in SAT production.