Less than a week after the federal budget allocated $1.7 billion to the domestic production of green metals and low-carbon liquid fuels, a new China-Australia collaboration on sustainable aviation biofuel has won grant funding.
The University of South Australia said on Monday it will work with Chinese counterparts over the next two years to explore the commercial opportunities of using bio feedstock to replace conventional kerosene jet fuels with ‘green’ fuel.
The collaboration was announced by the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) on Saturday, backed by grant funding of $230,000 from the National Foundation for Australia-China Relations.
The University of South Australia said on Monday it will work with Chinese counterparts over the next two years to explore the commercial opportunities of using bio feedstock to replace conventional kerosene jet fuels with ‘green’ fuel.
The collaboration was announced by the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) on Saturday, backed by grant funding of $230,000 from the National Foundation for Australia-China Relations.