IATA To Review 2050 Net-Zero Timeline

Walsh says SAF production and carbon-credit access remain key obstacles.

IATA To Review 2050 Net-Zero Timeline
[Credit: Jaromir Chalabala | Shutterstock]
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Key Takeaways:

  • IATA Director General Willie Walsh has raised concerns that the airline industry's 2050 net-zero goal is becoming unrealistic.
  • The primary challenges are the insufficient production of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) and a significant shortage of carbon credits required for the CORSIA scheme.
  • Walsh emphasized the need for an urgent dialogue to determine a more realistic timeline and urged governments to prioritize production incentives for SAF.
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IATA Director General Willie Walsh said the airline industry’s 2050 net-zero goal may need another look as sustainable aviation fuel production and access to carbon credits lag behind current targets. Speaking Sunday at IATA’s 82nd Annual General Meeting & World Air Transport Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Walsh said the Carbon Offsetting and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation (CORSIA) and SAF availability remain under pressure.

“I believe there’s still hope for 2050, but that is fading fast,” Walsh said during the IATA meeting. “We need an urgent dialogue to determine a realistic timeline given the current state of affairs.”

According to IATA, airlines will need between 170 million and 236 million eligible emissions units for the first phase of CORSIA. Walsh said 10 countries have made units available so far, totaling 38 million.

Walsh also said SAF production is not increasing fast enough to meet existing goals. IATA expects production to reach 2.4 million tons this year, enough to cover 0.8% of airline fuel demand. The industry’s 2050 target would require 500 million tons, or about 65% of fuel needs.

Walsh said governments should use production incentives before mandates and said any review should determine what each part of the aviation sector can deliver and when.

Matt Ryan

Matt is AVweb's lead editor. His eyes have been turned to the sky for as long as he can remember. Now a fixed-wing pilot, instructor and aviation writer, Matt also leads and teaches a high school aviation program in the Dallas area. Beyond his lifelong obsession with aviation, Matt loves to travel and has lived in Greece, Czechia and Germany for studies and for work.
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