Carbon transformation company Twelve, Alaska Air Group and Microsoft have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to collaborate on advancing the market for sustainable aviation fuels (SAF) to include fuels derived from recaptured CO2 and renewable energy, and working toward the first commercial demonstration flight in the United States powered by Twelve's E-Jet.
Through this agreement, Twelve, Alaska, and Microsoft will work to advance production and use of Twelve's E-Jet, a low carbon jet fuel produced by a power-to-liquids process leveraging the company's carbon transformation technology, which uses only renewable energy, water, and CO2 as inputs to transform CO2 into a variety of critical chemicals and materials conventionally made from fossil fuels. As part of the work outlined to advance the scalability and use of the technology, the companies will work toward a demonstration flight using E-Jet, and to supply the fuel to address some of Microsoft's business travel on Alaska.
"By producing our drop-in E-Jet fuel from captured CO2, we can rapidly and efficiently close the carbon cycle and allow businesses to sustainably use emissions to power their own business travel,". said Nicholas Flanders, Co-Founder and CEO of Twelve. "Partnering with progress-minded brands like Alaska Airlines and Microsoft adds thrust as we work towards delivering industrial-scale volumes of E-Jet."
"Alaska is on a path to net zero by 2040, which will require sustainable aviation fuels like Twelve's E-Jet," said Diana Birkett Rakow, senior vice president of public affairs and sustainability at Alaska Airlines. "We are committed to making SAF more widely available, at an affordable price, helping bring new alternatives to market, and using these fuels in our operation – a path that requires public policy action and private partnerships like this one. We're excited to work with Twelve and Microsoft to advance Twelve's E-Jet® fuel, turning captured CO2 and renewable energy into fuel for our airplanes."
"Addressing emissions from the economy's hardest-to-abate sectors, such as aviation, will take commitment from all stakeholders," said Elizabeth Willmott, Carbon Program Director at Microsoft. "Building on our Climate Innovation Fund investment in Twelve and relationship with Alaska Airlines, this collaboration provides an opportunity to accelerate decarbonization in the aviation industry by exploring how to use low carbon fuels produced by renewable electricity, like Twelve's E-Jet.