Representatives of more than 50 nations gathered in Santa Marta, Colombia, this week at what was billed as the first global summit on phasing out fossil fuels. A panel of scientists will be advising them
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Representatives of more than 50 nations gathered in Santa Marta, Colombia, this week at what was billed as the first global summit on phasing out fossil fuels. A panel of scientists will be advising them
Archived copies of the article:
Do you have any sources backing this up?
And also, I mentioned eSAF, not SAF. There’s a difference.
Don’t have an article at hand. I’ve seen this in two places, one article back when I was looking into it, and the other was one of Sabine Hossenfelder videos about fuels.
Numbers in both sources were similar
I think the effiency of eSAF is closer to be around 35-50 %, but I am by no means an expert in PtX (PtL).
But it is still extremely expensive, 6x more expensive than normal jet fuel. And the goal in EU is that by 2030 0.7 % of the fuel mix is eSAF.
I think the biggest challenge is the infrastructure. We are having issues with negative power prices in EU, more eSAF production can be one solution to a more stable grid in places with a high penetration of renewable energy production.
I seriously doubt these are actual round-trip efficiency numbers. Combustion engines have alone only ~45% efficiency and you’re adding all loses from the entire production process on top of that.
Again, I’m no expert, but here are a couple of sources on the effiency:
https://montel.energy/resources/blog/what-are-power-to-x-technologies
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrofuel
These articles basically confirm what I said. Round-trip efficiency is horrible.
Especially the table from wiki is telling.
Perhaps we are talking about two different things then. I’m talking about the effiency from renewable energy to eSAF, and it seems like you are talking about the efficiency from eSAF to propulsion energy, which then includes the effiency of a combustion engine.
I think it makes the most sense to isolate those two things, or else the number depends on how efficient the ICE is.
But, you are right that the effiency is really low, so the circumtances have to be there, before it makes sense, and those circumstances are a surplus of energy from renewable generators, which inevitable occurs when there is enough renewable power flowing in the grid.
I’m talking about all chain Round-trip efficiency, meaning from electricity to propulsion. It just happens that eSAF patch is extremely wasteful on multiple steps.
Battery tech is much better but you can’t use it for large scale transportation, especially airplanes.
There are also limitations to the storing excess power in batteries. The capacity of batteries is one of the obvious.
Electrolysis is better for long duration storage and for larger parks, and batteries have the limitation that you mention yourself, you cannot transport batteries, but you can transport hydrogen.