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First Flight of Jet Powered By Algae-Fuel

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Fri Jan 09, 2009 12:02 PM
from the fish-tanks-for-fuel-tanks dept.
s31523 writes "Today a US airline carrier conducted a 90 minute test flight with one of its engines powered by a 50/50 blend of biofuel and normal aircraft fuel. This was the first flight by a US carrier after other airlines have reported trying similar flights. In February 2008, a Virgin 747 flew from London to Amsterdam partly using a fuel derived from a blend of Brazilian babassu nuts and coconuts. At the end of December, one engine of an Air New Zealand 747 was powered by a 50/50 blend of jatropha plant oil and standard A1 jet fuel."
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[+] News: Are Biofuels Still Economically Feasible? 186 comments
thefickler writes "With falling gas prices, and the end of capitalism as we know it (otherwise known as the credit crisis), the biofuels industry is not looking as viable as it once was. Indeed biofuel production has fallen well short of expectations, with biofuel companies closing down or reducing production capacity. It appears that the industry's only hope is government support."
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  • by Jonah Bomber (535788) on Friday January 09 2009, @12:07PM (#26388347)
    Bio-fuel from algae is going to be an interesting field. It's easy to grow, difficult to harvest, and takes a lot of it to make into fuel. But it doesn't take up valuable cropland like corn does and really can be grown anywhere you're willing to build tanks. Solix (http://www.solixbiofuels.com/) is one such company working on the issue who see the potential of building tanks by power plants and then using the CO2 emissions to feed the algae.
    • by tuxgeek (872962) on Friday January 09 2009, @12:57PM (#26389121)

      It's easy to grow, difficult to harvest, and takes a lot of it to make into fuel.

      The kinks in harvesting algae will be worked out with development. Give the industry time.
      And of course it will take large quantities to produce large volumes of fuel, the up side is that algae is easy to grow anywhere and grows fast.

      Solix (http://www.solixbiofuels.com/):

      Since the whole organism converts sunlight into oil, algae can produce more oil in an area the size of a two-car garage than an entire football field of soybeans.

      On a side note and off topic, what imbecile modded you down to -1? Your post is informative and includes a great link to the technology and should be modded up. I amazes me just how many morons are out there with mod points. Mr Malda, would you fix this please. Someone needs a time out.

    • by NeutronCowboy (896098) on Friday January 09 2009, @02:04PM (#26390139)

      Algae is the only really viable bio-diesel source. The closest thing to it is switchgrass, but even that can't be fully turned into bio-diesel. The only - and significant - issue with algae-derived bio-diesel is that it's difficult to efficiently turn algae into diesel.

      What astounds me though is the number of times people try to turn slow-growing foodstuff into fuel. Coconut oil? I'm sure the same genius came up with the idea to use corn for ethanol fuel. Here's why those are dead ends:
      - they require a lot of surface, water and nutrients.
      - only a small fraction of the entire plant gets used.
      - impacts food prices.

      Compare that with algae, which:
      - can grow in vats of arbitrary size.
      - can be grown in sewage treatment plants.
      - main growth restriction is light.
      - the entire organism is used in the production of the fuel.

      Every time I hear someone advocate fuel from coconuts or corn, I'm wondering how much he's getting paid by corn and coconut growers.

  • I think it's great that they're testing, but that isn't the issue, is it? Isn't the real problem in getting the production up to a practical level?
    • Re:Great, but ... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by MBGMorden (803437) on Friday January 09 2009, @12:17PM (#26388519)

      Still good to know that this is renewable and useable though. Cars can go electric just fine. Airplanes capable of carrying any useful load (ie, people) have a much harder time. Weight is at a premium in an airplane and batteries are quite heavy compared to the energy they have stored.

      If/when we run out of oil I have confidence that electric cars will be pretty well developed and ready. For flight though, I think some form of combustion will still be needed.

      So production up to a practical level might not be as much of a problem if it means only supplying aviation fuel while everything else runs on electric. At would at a minimum keep small airplanes available for hobby use (where fuel burn is not really that bad - 4 to 10 gallons per hour is pretty common in smaller planes).

      • by eln (21727) on Friday January 09 2009, @12:37PM (#26388799) Homepage

        I, for one, am dismayed that they were so quick to shoot down my idea of commercial aircraft being launched to their destinations with enormous slingshots. It requires no fuel, and would look wicked cool. Where's my grant, huh? Why do these jokers who want to fly planes using used grease from a McDonald's fryer get all the money, and I don't get squat?

        All I need is a big tree and a really big elastic band at every airport, and I could solve this problem tomorrow!

        • Agreed that your idea would look "wicked cool", however I see a couple of problems. In order to keep the acceleration low enough to avoid destroying the plane and killing the passengers during take-off, the band will have to be fairly soft and very long. Although if we can stretch it constantly over the entire length of a sharply inclined runway, that may be enough.

          The second problem, however, is that the major technical hurdle will not be the launch. In order to stop the aircraft, you'll need a very lar

      • Re:Great, but ... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by 0100010001010011 (652467) on Friday January 09 2009, @01:16PM (#26389411)

        Which is why we need to start building light and fast rail NOW. Link all the cities above X million people, a hub in cities with more than X0 million people. Rail doesn't need to carry ANY energy. (Overhead power lines), rail can do regenerative braking and dump all that power back into the grid, power generation can be centralized and cleaned (rather than a million little diesel engines running around).

        • Re:Great, but ... (Score:4, Insightful)

          by 0123456 (636235) on Friday January 09 2009, @01:50PM (#26389915)

          Rail sucks for numerous reasons. Fast rail competitive with airlines really, really sucks; rail that can safely carry people at 500mph would be insanely, absurdly expensive, because you can't afford a single failure if you're going to kill hundreds of people in a derailment. Worse than that, rail is much harder to protect against even low-grade attackers because it only takes one whacko deliberately damaging the rails in the middle of nowhere to cause such a disaster.

          Finding an alternate affordable fuel source for airliners is going to be much easier than making fast trains that are competitive with airliners. Trains are an attempt to use a 19th century solution for 21st century problems.

          • Re:Great, but ... (Score:4, Interesting)

            by afidel (530433) on Friday January 09 2009, @02:03PM (#26390115)
            Thanks to the inconvenience of air travel a train doesn't have to go 500mph to compete with the airlines. A trip via Accella is often faster than the equivalent trip by plane because it goes from city center to city center and doesn't have the security theater surrounding it.
              • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

                everyone wants a train stop, which means by the time a high speed train gets up to speed it has to decelerate for the next stop.

                Take a local train to a hub, then get on the high speed non-stop train to your destination.

                The problem with infrastructure is that we don't have slave labor to put it in place. It costs millions of dollars per mile to build a highway, and (if I remember correctly) tens of millions (to 100+M) per mile for high speed rail.

                Too bad we don't have millions of people out of work right now

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        Weight is at a premium in an airplane and batteries are quite heavy compared to the energy they have stored.

        It's even worse than that. Even if a battery had the same energy density (by weight) as fuel, it would still be worse because the batteries do not get lighter over the course of the flight, so the aircraft must constantly expend energy to carry that mass. By burning fuel you lighten your load over the course of the flight which makes flying progressively cheaper.

        Also, many aircraft can't (safely) land with a full tank of fuel. They are designed such that the landing weight will be lower (due to burning fuel

    • I don't know how they are creating this algae, but I think we'd run into a similar problem as ethanol, where you'd need to devote so much land to growing that actually using the algae as a replacement for petroleum isn't feasible, plus the question- are you actually getting more energy out than you are putting in?

      And you'd still have lots of greenhouse gases, too.
      • Re:Great, but ... (Score:5, Informative)

        by sbeckstead (555647) on Friday January 09 2009, @12:45PM (#26388931) Homepage Journal
        They grow it in huge tanks that take up very little space compared to the mass they produce. It's actually one of the most viable sources of biomass that they have come up with yet, and the waste after extracting the oils can be used as fertilizer. So Algae is a win win bio fuel.
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          And, because it grows in tanks, it doesn't need good soil. You can grow algae in sunny locations where the soil is inadequate for farming.
          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            Look up Solix for a company that is investigating this. Algae are really the only long-term viable source of bio-diesel.

  • by xpuppykickerx (1290760) on Friday January 09 2009, @12:10PM (#26388415)
    the plane could fly solely using two African swallows with a string around the plane, such as they would if they were carrying coconuts.
    • Yes, if they were siberian swallows (much more durable and powerfull than european or african swallows) eating algae.
  • by Ralph Spoilsport (673134) on Friday January 09 2009, @12:11PM (#26388425) Journal
    And I posted to it then. It must have been a few years back. I did a calculation on how much energy one gets out of algae per acre, and to JUST FEED the traffic from EWR/JFK you would need to convert most of northern NJ into one giant goo pile. Not that Northern NJ isn't already one giant goo pile, but right now it's a giant goo pile full of houses and people and malls and highways and Dunkin Donut shops, all of it located on some of the nations most expensive real estate.

    Due to the low Energy Return on Energy Invested inherent to biofuels, you can't really make the stuff too far from its point of use, as the transport of the material would exceed its energy value. Jet aircraft are insanely inefficient and guzzle fuel at prodigious rates, and require fuel that has a high energy density. As a consequence I do not see biofuel for jets as anything but a stop gap measure.

    I suggest you move to where you like to live, so you can plan out your future, because in a few short decades, you're not going anywhere cheaply or quickly.

    RS

    • by lee1026 (876806) on Friday January 09 2009, @12:28PM (#26388645)

      If I recall correctly, moving liquids in a pipe does not cost much energy. In theory, there should be no reason why you can't produce somewhere dirt cheap, and then transport it over with pipelines. Alternatively, we can use electric trains to transport the stuff, and then generate the electricity with nuclear power.

    • by MorderVonAllem (931645) on Friday January 09 2009, @12:33PM (#26388721)
      This link [howstuffworks.com]shows a method of growing it vertically so allow optimal light exposure which apparently allows for greater growth (not sure how practical it is but at least it doesn't have to take much surface area)
    • by MozeeToby (1163751) on Friday January 09 2009, @12:38PM (#26388803)

      I assume you're basing those calculations on a couple inches of algea covering a huge area. Algea farming for biofuels doesn't work that way. You put the algea in large tubes (10 ft tall, 2 ft around) and continuously churn the water until the density of algea reaches your target harvest point. Then drain the water and process the agea.

      As for biofuels for jets being a stop gap measure, how do you expect to power jets 50 years from now if (when?) oil begins to run out. I don't see charging up some Li-Ion batteries to fly several hundred people from New York to London.

      Call me a techno-optimist, but I have faith we can solve these kinds of problems with research and engineering. We've done it before and we'll do it again.

      • "I don't see charging up some Li-Ion batteries to fly several hundred people from New York to London."

        You're close ... we need .... Dilithium Crystals!

    • by colin_young (902826) on Friday January 09 2009, @01:02PM (#26389181)

      To quote from Ask The Pilot [salon.com]:

      "As for fuel consumption, let's look first at a short trip, from New York to Boston and back again. This flight is slightly under an hour in each direction. A typical aircraft on such a route, an Airbus A320, will consume somewhere around 10,000 pounds or 1,500 gallons of jet fuel over the course of the round trip. Assuming 140 passengers, that's 71 pounds of fuel, or just over 10 gallons per person. A lone occupant making the same trip by car would consume twice those amounts."

      I'm assuming that Mr. Smith as a professional airline pilot has got his numbers right. So where's your backup for your "insanely inefficient" claim?

      • by Atanamis (236193) on Friday January 09 2009, @02:07PM (#26390195)

        To quote from Ask The Pilot:

        "As for fuel consumption, let's look first at a short trip, from New York to Boston and back again. This flight is slightly under an hour in each direction. A typical aircraft on such a route, an Airbus A320, will consume somewhere around 10,000 pounds or 1,500 gallons of jet fuel over the course of the round trip. Assuming 140 passengers, that's 71 pounds of fuel, or just over 10 gallons per person. A lone occupant making the same trip by car would consume twice those amounts."

        I'm assuming that Mr. Smith as a professional airline pilot has got his numbers right. So where's your backup for your "insanely inefficient" claim?

        You are comparing a form of mass transit to a single occupant car. Nobody would claim that a single occupant car was fuel efficient. Replace your single occupant car with two to four people, and the fuel usage drops to equal or half as much as an airplane. Put the people in a plane on an appropriately sized bus, and the fuel per person would drop even more. Use a train which has a dedicated path and moves at a constant speed (again, appropriately sized), and fuel usage would drop further.

        In today's transportation, energy efficiency is basically a non-issue. People value convenience and speed far, far more than energy usage. When energy costs rise as oil depletion nears, this will change. More money will be pumped into creating new energy sources and people will travel both less and more efficiently. Most office workers don't REALLY need to travel as often as they do. Most drivers don't REALLY need a large heavy vehicle for most of their transportation. Even public transportation in the US is vastly energy inefficient due to low usage patterns. The only crisis will come if oil prices impair the ability to produce and distribute food before alternatives are found. Everything else will scale back if and when it becomes necessary.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      JUST FEED the traffic from EWR/JFK you would need to convert most of northern NJ into one giant goo pile

      So...no changes would be necessary, then?

    • by init100 (915886) on Friday January 09 2009, @01:08PM (#26389273)

      Jet aircraft are insanely inefficient and guzzle fuel at prodigious rates

      Actually not. If we e.g. take a common Boeing 737-400, with a fuel capacity of 23170 liters, a maximum range (fully loaded) of 4005 km and a seating capacity of 159 seats, it yields a fuel consumption of 0.036 liters of fuel per km per passenger, which translates to 65 passenger-miles per gallon of fuel.

      That's not so bad, is it? Sure, it assumes that the aircraft uses its maximum range (take-off comprises a significant share of the total fuel consumption, so a short flight is much more wasteful than a long flight) and contain a full load of passengers, but still, it's a pretty good number.

    • by WebCowboy (196209) on Friday January 09 2009, @01:10PM (#26389305)

      and to JUST FEED the traffic from EWR/JFK you would need to convert most of northern NJ into one giant goo pile.

      Not really a PILE--probably a nice thick coat of algae, but not a PILE. Besides, why would you bother covering New Jersey in it when you could grow it in the ocean or in lakes? Comparatively speaking the area of NJ is microscopic when you consider how much surface of the earth is covered in water. Not only that, you can grow it in "3D", so you can grow thousands of percent more Algae per acre of SURFACE than you could, say, CORN--that "darling" of the biofuel industry.

      Due to the low Energy Return on Energy Invested inherent to biofuels, you can't really make the stuff too far from its point of use, as the transport of the material would exceed its energy value.

      I've heard, in fact, that Algae biofuel is MORE THAN 3000 PERCENT MORE ENERGY DENSE THAN CORN ETHANOL. Even myths about corn ethanol taking more energy to produce than it provides has been dispelled (though corn ethanol IS only a fraction as efficient as petroleum fuel and thus not a good alternative). As a matter of fact, if you set aside an area of ocean near the shore about the size of NJ, not only would it produce enough jet fuel to feed EWR/JFK traffic--it would be enough to fuel ALL FLIGHTS AND AUTOMOTIVE TRAFFIC IN THE UNITED STATES.

      The problem with algae fuel isn't growing the stuff (supply far exceed demand--it is often the byproduct of water pollution), or how much energy it provides (quite a lot in fact). The problem is that until now almost nothing has been invested in refining the stuff--virtually all the fuel refineries in the world are designed to refine "dead dinosaur residue". he refining infrastructure investment requirement to process that much algae is MASSIVE, which is the single biggest reason we don't all run our cars on algae today.

      I suggest you move to where you like to live, so you can plan out your future, because in a few short decades, you're not going anywhere cheaply or quickly.

      Thanks for the advice, Chicken Little, I'll take it under advisement.

      Of course, our society is extremely wasteful and energy inefficient right now when compared to potential, so ignoring efforts in reducing energy use overall perhaps the sky will indeed fall. However, nothing of the sort will happen as we learn to do everything more efficiently.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      According to the washington post [washingtonpost.com] it would take only 15,000 square miles to replace all the oil used in the United States which includes the oil costs to move oil around.
      Which sound huge right? Luckly this country is pretty damn big, with lots of pretty useless areas....
      The Mojave Desert for instance is over 22,000 square miles.
      While you obvious can't covert the whole thing and dump it all in one place you can probably still find lots of place to stick huge tanks of this stuff, and the tech is only going to

  • Not that exciting? (Score:5, Informative)

    by henrygb (668225) on Friday January 09 2009, @12:12PM (#26388433)
    It is well known that biofuels can (at a cost) be refined to meet most specifications. Providing there is some mineral fuel in the blend to prevent microbial contamination and growth, using this should cause no problems apart from cost. But since jet kerosene is generally untaxed, it is harder to subsidise biofuel replacements than it is for road fuels.
  • Is this really an Environmentally-friendly change, or just ensuring that it's a fuel that can be supplied long-term (not limited like fossil fuels)?

    Consider these points before agreeing that it truly benefits the environment:

    - what energy and chemicals goes into the growing, harvesting, and processing of the plants to make it into fuel? What CO2/pollution does that create?

    - the land used to grow the crops... are we displacing food crops? Would that land otherwise have sequest

    • Considering the insane amount of fuel that goes into a single flight (i think a single transcontinental flight takes more fuel than a car during the lifetime of its owner), this can't be good. As you said, we are displacing food crops, which is part of the reason behind raising food costs. Making humans starve can't be a very good change. Thats how wars start.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      As long as the CO2 is coming from a truly "renewable" source (meaning that CO2 went into it during it's production) and it's production doesn't involve improperly disposing of some toxic chemical (the EPA does a relatively fair job of this,) how much more environmentally friendly can you ever expect capitalists to get?

      We could argue all day about how a car trip through the countryside hurt the feelings of a pair of owls and now they aren't talking to each other and their population is in decline and all of

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        >> Land (and forest) do not sequester carbon to any significant extent - the decomposition process of dead plant matter releases the carbon back into the atmosphere.

        Actually, they do - however to a finite capacity. It's true that as plants die, the carbon goes back into the environment, but new plants grow to replace them. Once you deforest an area, or cut it down to grow crops, you've permanently released that carbon to the atmosphere - You're taking an existing carbon sink and destroying it.

        If yo

  • I'm all for biofuels and algae is certainly promising, but AFAIK, it's nowhere near industrial production yet. (cellulosic ethanol is getting there though)

    Note that it says:

    The biofuel used in the demonstration flight was a blend of two different types of alternative oils - algae and jatropha.

    They don't say how much algae-derived biofuel was in that mix. I'm guessing this is rather a way for the company involved to get attention and hence, more funding. I suppose the ends justify the means, though. It take

  • Which airline? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by damn_registrars (1103043) on Friday January 09 2009, @12:28PM (#26388637) Journal
    The description

    A US airline carrier

    Is rather vague. Would it kill the editors to read the first line of the article itself to see

    The 90-minute flight by a Continental Boeing 737-800 went better than expected, a spokesperson said.

    Considering how poorly many of the carriers are doing in terms of finances and customer satisfaction (not to mention customer service) it could be useful to know which one is trying the biofuel, even if it was a short test.

    • It can only be an improvement. I'd prefer "malfunctioning waste treatment plant" over "jet exhaust".

      I'm hoping it smells like "fish tank".

    • Gross is good (Score:5, Insightful)

      by WebCowboy (196209) on Friday January 09 2009, @12:45PM (#26388939)

      Eew. Algae. What's next, a flight powered by athlete's foot?

      You don't EAT the damn stuff dude, you burn it! Who the hell CARES what it's made of? Sure seems like a lot less trouble and easier on the earth than digging deep into the earth and dredging up old dead dinosaurs to burn.

      I'm also hoping it shuts up the idiots who jump up and down yelling "but how will we feed the children?!?!" whenever someone advocates biofuels. BIO in biofuels does NOT equal FOOD. If I recall, algal blooms are in OVERabundance due to human activity (our detergents ending up in water and supplying phosphates to grow the stuff in excess--tainting our water and killing fish, etc). Seems like an elegant solution to me.

      Athletes foot wouldn't be next, but I can thing of another abundant biofuel source that we have a hard time eliminating and that nobody would eat: fecal waste. Everything from poultry litter and cow manure to even human sewerage. How is THAT for gross?

      Also, with biofuels, the PROCESSED end product is chemically similar or even identical to conventional hydrocarbon fuels. If you run straight corn oil in your car of COURSE it'll smell like the fryer at the local burger joint, but you don't run straight algae in a jet engine!

      Incidentally, have you ever smelled NORMAL jet fuel, or better yet, the EXHAUST from an engine running on it? Jets typically run on a naptha/kerosene blend, which besides being a carcinogen will give you a real bad headache afer a few minutes (unless you're into doing things like snorting tremclad or shoving jiffy markers up your nose or other "fun with fumes" I guess). The exhaust smells similarly unpleasant--almost, but not quite as nice, as deeply inhaling the cloud of black sooty smoke that comes out of the tailpipe of an old diesel truck with fouled injectors.

      SO, I'm guessing that it'll perhaps make the airports smell BETTER if algae-derived biofuels become more commonplace. It's also much better than using exotic and/or edible sources, such as coconuts.

      • Re:Gross is good (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Stachybotris (936861) on Friday January 09 2009, @01:23PM (#26389511)

        You don't EAT the damn stuff dude, you burn it! Who the hell CARES what it's made of? Sure seems like a lot less trouble and easier on the earth than digging deep into the earth and dredging up old dead dinosaurs to burn.

        Actually, most oil comes from dead algae [wikipedia.org], not dead dinosaurs. Check the section entitled 'Formation' in the aforementioned Wiki link. So in this regard, we're just changing the current status of the input material.

      • Re:Gross is good (Score:5, Insightful)

        by c6gunner (950153) on Friday January 09 2009, @01:44PM (#26389821)

        Incidentally, have you ever smelled NORMAL jet fuel, or better yet, the EXHAUST from an engine running on it? Jets typically run on a naptha/kerosene blend...

        Actually, they tend to avoid blending it with naphtha these days - it's a bit dangerous. The fuel itself doesn't smell particularly bad, although the exhaust usually does. That's primarily because aircraft fuel - contrary to popular belief - is much "dirtier" than the fuel you'd put in your car. Jet-turbine engines can burn just about anything, so they can tolerate a much higher level of impurity than your typical piston engine.

          • Re:Gross is good (Score:5, Informative)

            by c6gunner (950153) on Friday January 09 2009, @05:36PM (#26392963)

            Yes, I know, I work on them for a living :) I wouldn't exactly call them "simpler", though. The basic concept is simple enough, but large jet-turbine engines are anything but simple.

            And yes, the fuel is considerably cheaper. There's no point spending extra money in processing the fuel when your engines can handle a high level of impurity. Basic economics.

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        even human sewerage

        Sewage. Sewerage is what sewage flows through.

        Jets typically run on a naptha/kerosene blend

        Only in very cold climates where the naptha keeps it from getting gooey. That stuff, called Jet-B, is widely banned elsewhere because it will ignite too easily in a crash landing. The rest of the civil aviation world uses Jet-A (in the USA) and Jet-A1 (elsewhere). Apart from having the solid crap filtered out of it, and some microorganism and corrosion inhibitors added, it's plain old kerosene

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        The substantive impact on food supplies from biofuels comes from food production resources (most obviously land) switching to fuel production. This is irrespective of whether foodstuffs are what is being converted.

        It's unlikely the problematic existing algae blooms will be used for fuel. More algae will be created for this use - it will be farmed. The objective is to produce biofuel cheaply, tax-free and without being imported... er, I mean in a way that minimises impact to food production, i.e. intensively

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        The most productive source of bio oil is hemp, which has many non THC strains, but is illegal anyway.

        Too bad the US gov is morons... Of course flying a hemp powered plane might not inspire confidence.

        -Viz

          • Sadly the supposed "efficiency" of hemp oil as a magical bio-fuel is a constant myth propogated by the pro-MJ crowd.

            Those damn Michael Jackson fans and the crazy propaganda they spew!

    • Re:Gross (Score:5, Insightful)

      by CompMD (522020) on Friday January 09 2009, @01:13PM (#26389349)

      If you can smell something outside the outside the cabin of a pressurized airplane, you have bigger problems than being offended by the smell.

    • Re:Flight Tests (Score:5, Insightful)

      by MozeeToby (1163751) on Friday January 09 2009, @12:23PM (#26388597)

      You can bet that the tests were performed for hundreds of hours in controlled environements, you don't just put a couple hundred million dollar airplane into the air and hope that everything works out ok. Of course, there are a ton of variables still to be tested with real world flights: lower air pressure, oxygen density, and temerature for a start.

      The thing people don't realize is that modern jet engines can burn practically anything, gas turbines are remarkably flexible. The real questions are how the new fuel affects range and maintanence issues, if the algea fuel gums up the fuel pumps after a half dozen flights, it's not going to see a whole lot of use until all the issues are resolved.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      So how do you store it while in the aircraft? AFAIK, hydrogen needs to be compressed to a very high pressure, which requires heavy steel gas flasks for storage, not fuel tanks made of thin aluminium sheets as those used on aircraft today.