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 Sustainability in Lufthansa Airline

Sustainable Energy 

 Sustainable Aviation  

4 minutes read

Introduction Sustainability in Lufthansa Airline

Lufthansa Airlines, one of the world’s leading airlines, has made significant strides in embracing sustainability and environmental responsibility. 

With a deep understanding of the impact of aviation on the planet, Lufthansa has taken proactive measures to mitigate its carbon footprint and promote sustainable practices throughout its operations. 

From adopting cleaner technologies to implementing innovative initiatives, Lufthansa has demonstrated its commitment to reducing its environmental impact while ensuring a seamless travel experience for passengers. This article explores the sustainability efforts undertaken by Lufthansa Airlines and highlights the airline’s dedication to creating a greener and more sustainable future for the aviation industry.

Fact and Data Sustainability in Lufthansa Airline

Fact

Lufthansa Airlines has set ambitious sustainability goals to reduce its carbon emissions and promote environmental stewardship. As part of its commitment to sustainability, the airline has implemented various initiatives and adopted innovative technologies.

Data:

1. Carbon reduction targets: 

Lufthansa aims to reduce its specific CO2 emissions by 25% compared to 2019 levels by the year 2030. This target encompasses both operational and non-operational emissions.

2. Fleet renewal: Lufthansa has been actively modernizing its fleet to include more fuel-efficient aircraft. As of 2021, the airline operates a fleet of over 350 aircraft, including newer models such as the Airbus A350 and Boeing 777X, which offer better fuel efficiency and reduced emissions compared to older aircraft.

3. Sustainable aviation fuels (SAF): 

Lufthansa has been a pioneer in exploring and adopting sustainable aviation fuels. The airline has conducted numerous flights powered partially by SAF, which have significantly lower CO2 emissions compared to traditional jet fuels. Lufthansa actively collaborates with fuel producers and suppliers to increase the availability and use of SAF in its operations.

4. Waste reduction and recycling: 

Lufthansa emphasizes waste reduction and recycling efforts. The airline implements comprehensive waste management programs to minimize the amount of waste generated during flights and at its facilities. This includes recycling paper, plastic, glass, and other materials, as well as reducing single-use items.

5. Energy-efficient operations: 

Lufthansa continuously invests in energy-efficient technologies and processes to optimize its operations. This includes utilizing energy-efficient ground handling equipment, implementing energy-saving measures in its facilities, and optimizing flight routes to minimize fuel consumption.

6. Environmental certifications: 

Lufthansa has achieved various environmental certifications, including the IATA Environmental Assessment (IEnvA) certification and ISO 14001 certification. These certifications recognize the airline’s commitment to environmental management and sustainability practices.

It’s important to note that specific data and initiatives may evolve over time as Lufthansa continues to advance its sustainability efforts.

Power-to-Liquid (PtL) technology represents a significant step towards achieving a sustainable energy ecosystem by efficiently converting renewable electricity into liquid fuels. With its potential for large-scale energy storage, decarbonization of transportation, carbon neutrality, and fuel flexibility, PtL offers a viable and promising solution to some of the major challenges associated with renewable energy integration. 

https://www.exaputra.com/2023/05/sustainability-takes-flight-lufthansa.html

Renewable Energy

Photography of Violence and Hate

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Whether these days of hate and oppression will persist for a “long, long time,” or whether the pendulum is about to swing back the other way remains to be seen.

It’s certainly a terrible time to be an American.

Photography of Violence and Hate

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Renewable Energy

No Hungry Kids

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I just saw a question on social media: do you want your tax dollars going to feed someone else’s kids??

Yes.  I’d like to live in a world in which no kids go hungry, and I don’t have a problem contributing to create that world.

This may sound like a tall order, especially given the variability of wealth in the world’s countries.

But let’s stick with the U.S. for a minute.  In the US, nearly 14 million children live in food-insecure households, a statistic that has risen recently, with some reports indicating that one in five children face hunger.

This is disgraceful.

So again, yes.  Please sign me up to allocate a portion of my tax dollars to feeding hungry kids.

No Hungry Kids

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Wind Power Succeeds to Meet Energy Needs

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Weather Guard Lightning Tech

Wind Power Succeeds to Meet Energy Needs

While European wind giants like Maersk and Ørsted face cancellations and layoffs, America’s offshore wind projects in Virginia and Massachusetts are surging ahead, proving that genuine energy demand trumps political headwinds when the physics and economics align.

Sign up now for Uptime Tech News, our weekly email update on all things wind technology. This episode is sponsored by Weather Guard Lightning Tech. Learn more about Weather Guard’s StrikeTape Wind Turbine LPS retrofit. Follow the show on FacebookYouTubeTwitterLinkedin and visit Weather Guard on the web. And subscribe to Rosemary Barnes’ YouTube channel here. Have a question we can answer on the show? Email us!

It’s an interesting time to be in wind energy….In a shipyard in Singapore, there’s a vessel worth four hundred and seventy-five million dollars. It’s ninety-eight percent complete, built specifically to install wind turbines off the coast of New York. And it’s just floating there… abandoned.

Maersk Offshore Wind walked away from the contract last week. Just cancelled it. Left Seatrium, the shipbuilder, holding a near-finished vessel with nowhere to go. The ship was supposed to build Empire Wind, but now lawyers are circling and nobody knows what happens next.

This is happening at the same time Orsted, the company that pioneered offshore wind energy, announces it’s cutting two thousand jobs. That’s a quarter of their entire workforce. In Germany, Eno Energy just filed for bankruptcy, leaving two hundred and eighty workers unemployed and the state government holding thirteen million euros in loan guarantees.

You might think the wind industry is collapsing.

But, you’d be wrong. Very wrong.

Thirty miles off the coast of Virginia Beach, workers just accomplished something remarkable. They hammered one hundred and seventy-six massive foundations into the Atlantic seabed, finishing the job in just five months… ahead of schedule… in what everyone agrees was perfect weather. And the weather along the East Cost of the US has been splendid this year.

This is Dominion Energy’s Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project, and when it starts generating power next March, it will be America’s largest offshore wind farm. Two-point-six gigawatts of power, enough for half a million homes.

But here’s what makes this story truly odd in today’s US political environment….

Republican Congresswoman Jen Kiggans from Virginia Beach stood up on the House floor last month to defend this wind farm. Not attack it… defend it. She explained that this project provides a five hundred million dollar power grid upgrade to Naval Air Station Oceana. She called it a matter of national security.

House Speaker Mike Johnson from Louisiana, oil country, personally told reporters he delivered Kiggans’ message directly to the President. “We want to do right by Virginians,” he said.

Think about that for a moment. In this political climate, a Republican Speaker is defending wind power. Why? Because Virginia desperately needs electricity. Data centers are consuming power at unprecedented rates, the military requires reliable energy, and this project has already created two thousand American jobs while pumping two billion dollars into the economy.

Meanwhile, across the Atlantic, something interesting is also developing. Chinese manufacturer Ming Yang Smart Energy just announced they’re investing two billion dollars to build a turbine factory in Scotland. They’re promising fifteen hundred jobs for Scottish workers, with production starting in twenty twenty-eight. The job creations and investment amount sounds great, but there are still many hurdles to overcome. The reliability and insurability of Ming Yang turbines is still a hot topic amongst wind energy engineers. And security concerns with Chinese turbines will surely raise eyebrows of the UK, EU and US governments. Only time will tell….

Remember that ship floating in Singapore? Here’s where the story gets interesting. Dominion has just taken delivery of Charybdis, the first American-built wind turbine installation vessel. When it finishes its work in Virginia, it will be available for other projects — like the Empire Wind project off the coast of New York. One company’s cancellation could become another’s opportunity. We shall see….

And before I forget, up in Massachusetts, without fanfare or political drama, Vineyard Wind has quietly reached fifty percent capacity. Thirty turbines are now spinning, delivering four hundred megawatts to the New England grid.

Here’s what years of covering energy markets has taught me: Politics is temporary, but physics is forever.

The companies struggling today made a bet that political support … and interest rates….would remain stable. The projects succeeding made a different bet entirely. They bet on need and they have flexibility.

Virginia needs power. The military needs energy security. Data centers need electricity to keep the internet running. And when genuine need meets engineering capability, politics usually steps aside.

That abandoned ship in Singapore won’t stay abandoned for long. Those unemployed German and Danish engineers will find new jobs.

Because here’s the secret that wind energy professionals understand but politicians sometimes forget: We’re not running out of wind, we’re running out of power….and money.

The move to lower cost power sources shouldn’t really be about politics anymore. It should be about pocketbook math. And the simple reality that our electricity demand is growing faster than older energy sources can supply.

Ultimately the winners in this industry won’t be the ones with the best political connections or the loudest voices.

They’ll be the ones who understand that when you’re building infrastructure designed to last generations, you’d better be building something the world needs and can afford for years to come.

https://weatherguardwind.com/wind-energy-needs/

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