UK government awards 17 companies £63m in SAF funding

  • Gas
  • July 22, 2025

The UK government has awarded 17 companies £63m in sustainable aviation fuels (SAF) funding under the Advanced Fuels Fund (AFF) scheme, swelling overall funding to £198m.

The biggest winners were Velocys (£27m), which is developing a commercial scale plant that uses gasification and Fischer-Tropsch technology to convert black bin bag waste into SAF; Lanzatech UK (£24m), which aims to convert steel mill off-gases into ethanol and then use alcohol-to-jet technology; and Fulcrum Bioenergy (£16.7m), which is also converting black bin bag waste into SAF.

Zero Petroleum (£3.49m) is developing a demonstration production module operating in Orkney and commercial scale plant that uses power-to-liquid technology to convert biogenic and direct air capture CO2 and green hydrogen into SAF, Willis Sustainable Fuels receives £4.7m to develop power-to-liquid technology to convert CO2 and green hydrogen into SAF, and Oxccu Tech gets £2.81m for similar work converting biogenic CO2 and green hydrogen into SAF.

Essar Energy Transition (EET), a UK subsidiary of Indian multinational Essar Group, was awarded £2.5m for a SAF production hub at its Stanlow refinery.

… to continue reading this article and more, please login, register for free, or consider subscribing to gasworld

You’ve reached your weekly limit to access free articles!

Want to keep reading?

Please register for free and create a profile to gain access to this full article and gasworld’s daily news.

For access to more content including our monthly digital magazines, subscriber-only features or columns and all our other gasworld archives, please consider subscribing.

Alternatively, you can continue reading more articles as a guest on Wednesday, 23rd July at 4:28PM

   

  • Related Posts

    • Gas
    • June 19, 2026
    Xycarb secures $3.9m Texas semiconductor grant

    By 57 min ago 1 min read Semiconductor components manufacturer Xycarb Technology has secured a $3.9m Texas Semiconductor Innovation Fund grant to expand its Georgetown production facility in Texas. The…

    • Gas
    • June 19, 2026
    Dynelectro ships 250kW SOEC to Icelandic e-SAF pilot plant

    By 15 min ago 2 min read Denmark’s Dynelectro has sent the first solid oxide electrolyser (SOEC) to Syntholene’s geothermal-powered synthetic aviation fuel (e-SAF) pilot plant in Húsavík, Iceland. Set…

    Have You Seen?

    Xycarb secures $3.9m Texas semiconductor grant

    • June 19, 2026
    Xycarb secures $3.9m Texas semiconductor grant

    Solis to Showcase Full-Scenario Energy Storage Solutions at Intersolar Europe 2026

    • June 19, 2026
    Solis to Showcase Full-Scenario Energy Storage Solutions at Intersolar Europe 2026

    Dynelectro ships 250kW SOEC to Icelandic e-SAF pilot plant

    • June 19, 2026
    Dynelectro ships 250kW SOEC to Icelandic e-SAF pilot plant

    Green Energy Stock: Renewable Energy Stocks Shine Despite Broader Market Decline On June 19

    • June 19, 2026
    Green Energy Stock: Renewable Energy Stocks Shine Despite Broader Market Decline On June 19

    Morrison-Backed Chrysalis Renewables Closes First Deal Under Hanwha Partnership with 357 MW US Solar Assets

    • June 19, 2026
    Morrison-Backed Chrysalis Renewables Closes First Deal Under Hanwha Partnership with 357 MW US Solar Assets

    First LNG tanker crosses Strait of Hormuz and docks after peace deal

    • June 19, 2026
    First LNG tanker crosses Strait of Hormuz and docks after peace deal

    Oil Prices Are Crashing. Inventories Tell A Different Story.

    • June 19, 2026
    Oil Prices Are Crashing. Inventories Tell A Different Story.

    OPEC’s Oil Demand Bet Is on India, Not Europe

    • June 19, 2026
    OPEC’s Oil Demand Bet Is on India, Not Europe

    Germany Considers Extending Oil Reserve Relief Despite Falling Prices

    • June 19, 2026
    Germany Considers Extending Oil Reserve Relief Despite Falling Prices

    80 Million Barrels of Crude Are Lined Up to Exit the Strait of Hormuz

    • June 19, 2026
    80 Million Barrels of Crude Are Lined Up to Exit the Strait of Hormuz