The US air force will this week call for the world's top
scientists to come together in a 21st-century Apollo-style
programme to develop greener fuels and tackle global warming.
It wants universities, governments, companies and environmental
groups to collaborate on a multibillion-dollar effort to work
out greenhouse gas emissions of existing and future fuels.
William Anderson, an assistant secretary of the air force,
said the project aimed to calculate the overall carbon footprint
of the world's energy sources, rather than merely measure
their direct emissions.
He said controversy over the environmental impact of biofuels
showed such an effort was needed to avoid making the situation
worse: "If you look at the situation with bioethanol
from corn, a lot of people saw that as a panacea, but now
it seems that if you include the lifecycle greenhouse gas
emissions, the carbon footprint may be worse than people realised.
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"If the world wants to get serious on greenhouse gas
emissions, we have to figure out where they're coming from."
Anderson said the effort required was the modern equivalent
of the Apollo missions to put a man on the moon, "and
the US air force knows something about that". The project
will be discussed on Wednesday at a meeting in Washington
DC organised by the Connecticut Centre for Advanced Technology.
Anderson said the project aimed to combine research already
under way across the world, and to encourage governments and
companies to release "billions of dollars" of funds.
US officials have already met the Royal Air Force and French
air force to discuss ways to make their activities more environmentally
friendly. A second meeting is scheduled for Paris in June.
Anderson said the military could learn from civilian airlines,
which have studied how to reduce weight and increase fuel
efficiency. He said: "What everybody sees is the fighter
aircraft, but the predominant part of what we do is transporting
people and stuff around. And so do British Airways, so do
Virgin and so do Fed Ex."
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