
Four Giants Team Up to Power 11 Million Gallons of Green Jet Fuel
DSV, Microsoft, United Airlines, and Phillips 66 just joined forces to unlock 11 million gallons of sustainable aviation fuel, proving corporate climate action can fly high. This collaboration marks one of aviation's biggest leaps toward cleaner skies.
Four industry titans just proved that fighting climate change doesn't require going it alone.
Global logistics leader DSV has partnered with Microsoft, United Airlines, and Phillips 66 to bring 11 million gallons of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) to market. The collaboration tackles one of the hardest emissions challenges: making air travel cleaner without grounding the world economy.
Sustainable aviation fuel reduces carbon emissions by up to 80% compared to traditional jet fuel. It's made from renewable sources like used cooking oil and agricultural waste instead of fossil fuels. The problem? It's expensive and difficult to produce at scale.
That's where this partnership changes the game. By pooling their purchasing power and resources, these four companies are creating the market demand needed to make SAF production financially viable for refiners like Phillips 66.
Microsoft brings its corporate commitment to carbon negativity by 2030. United Airlines contributes its operational expertise and distribution network across thousands of daily flights. DSV adds its global logistics footprint and supply chain knowledge. Phillips 66 provides the refining capacity to turn renewable feedstocks into actual fuel.

The Ripple Effect
This isn't just about four companies meeting their sustainability goals. When industry leaders make bold moves like this, they create a blueprint others can follow.
The 11 million gallons will prevent approximately 100,000 metric tons of CO2 from entering the atmosphere. That's equivalent to taking 21,000 cars off the road for an entire year.
More importantly, the partnership proves that cross-industry collaboration can solve problems no single company could tackle alone. Airlines can't produce fuel. Tech companies can't fly planes. Logistics firms can't refine oil. But together, they're building the infrastructure for cleaner aviation.
The timing matters too. Aviation accounts for about 2-3% of global carbon emissions, and that number was climbing before the pandemic. As travel rebounds, solutions like this become critical for meeting climate goals without sacrificing connectivity.
Other major corporations are watching. When partnerships like this succeed, they lower barriers for the next company considering sustainable aviation fuel, creating a positive cycle of adoption and innovation.
HOPEFUL CLOSE: Four companies just showed the world that the path to cleaner skies runs through collaboration, not competition.
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Based on reporting by Google News - Emissions Reduction
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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