Virgin Atlantic's 100% SAF Flight Sparks Debate on Green Aviation
While the airline touts its commitment to carbon reductions, critics argue the move is a 'greenwashing gimmick' and highlight the same emissions from burning used cooking oil as kerosene.
- Virgin Atlantic flew the first trans-Atlantic passenger flight using 100% sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) from London to New York, aiming to highlight the airline's commitment to carbon reductions.
- The industry's focus on SAF is due to its increasing role in generating harmful greenhouse gas, with aviation potentially accounting for a fifth of all carbon emissions by 2050 without significant change.
- Global SAF production met only 0.1% of the industry’s fuel needs last year, rising to 0.2% in 2023, according to the International Air Transport Association.
- SAF is made from a variety of feed sources, from used cooking oil to plant waste to household trash and ethanol, but it currently costs as much as four times traditional jet fuel.
- Experts have criticized the flight as a 'greenwashing gimmick', arguing that the tailpipe emissions from burning used cooking oil are the same as kerosene made from fossil fuels.



























