United Airlines is launching a venture fund designed to support startups that are working on making jet fuel more sustainable and decarbonizing air travel. Air Canada, Boeing, GE Aerospace, JPMorgan Chase, and Honeywell are also partnering in the effort. 

"Solving climate change is doable but it requires hard work and real leadership," said United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby in a statement. "This fund is unique. It's not about offsets or things that are just greenwashing. Instead, we're creating a system that drives investment to build a new industry around sustainable aviation fuel, essentially from scratch."

Over the past two years, United has invested in multiple companies associated with "sustainable aviation fuel" (SAF) such as Cemvita, Dimensional Energy, and NEXT Renewable Fuels. SAF is any jet fuel that produces fewer greenhouse gasses. Right now, these alternatives must be blended with conventional jet fuels to meet regulations. The goal is to increase this ratio. 

United Airlines itself has invested in the future production of three billion gallons of SAF. 

To accelerate the transition, United will give customers the option to contribute to the fund whenever they buy a ticket, with the first 10,000 contributes to receive 500 bonus miles. The default contribution is set at $3.50. At that rate, if all 152 million people who flew on United in 2022 contributed, United said it would generate 40 million gallons of alternative fuel annually.

Helping this effort along is a new tax credit through the Inflation Reduction Act, which United said will accelerate investments in SAF infrastructure and supply and help lower costs. 

The company said it aims to be 100 percent green by 2050 without relying on carbon offsets. 

Share:
More In Business
How Landlines Lost the American Public
During AT&T's widespread outage Thursday, landline phones were a working alternative — which most of the U.S. does not have. Over half of Americans are estimated to have ditched landlines altogether.
Ending the Black Maternal Morbidity Crisis
Jade Kearney Dube, Founder & CEO of She Matters talks the Symptom Tracker app, cultural competency for healthcare providers, and being a Black woman CEO looking for funding.
The Future of Bit Mining
Ahead of April’s planned BitCoin halving, Bitfarms CEO Geoff Morphy shares why he thinks the crypto rally will continue, plus why you’ll see a broader adoption of clean energy for mining.
The Fed’s Rate Cuts Will Be ‘Surgical’
Lara Rhame, FS Investments chief U.S. economist, discusses the recent market highs, how the job market is in a ‘good place,’ and why rates staying higher for longer might not be a bad thing.
Load More