// Project

The Iceland eSAF Project

IðunnH2 is developing a first-of-a-kind electro-kerosene facility in Iceland, five kilometres from Keflavík International Airport. 300 MW installed capacity, 70,000 tonnes of synthetic jet fuel a year, first commercial fuel in 2029.

// Facility

The entire e-fuel production chain, completed on one site

The state-of-the-art facility will use sustainably sourced, local inputs to create synthetic jet fuel for use at Keflavík Airport. Electrolysis, methanol synthesis, fuel conversion, and blending all take place at the same facility, with no intermediate transport and no external refinery. The inputs are Icelandic: renewable electricity, captured CO₂, and water. The production process is a series of individually proven technologies that have never been integrated at this scale, developed in collaboration with Nel, Haffner Energy, and our neighbours Carbon Recycling International1, with inputs from Honeywell UOP.

// Iceland eSAF Project · production process

Methanol-to-Jet pathway

// Inputs

Renewable electricity300 MW installed
WaterSustainable supply
CO₂ Captured carbonCO₂ feedstock

// eSAF production · Green Industrial Park

01Electrolysis275 MW
02Methanol synthesis
03Methanol-to-Jet
04Blending
eSAF

// Primary output

70,000t / yr

eSAF

Full nameplate · first commercial fuel 2029

// Additional value streams

H₂Hydrogen
e-Methanol
District heat
O₂Oxygen

// Site

Built next to the runway that needs it

The facility will be located in Kadeco’s Green Industrial Park in Suðurnesjabær2, five kilometres from Keflavík International Airport. The park has industrial-grade port access, established heavy-industry infrastructure, and an existing connection to Iceland’s national grid3. The fuel produced here will be blended onsite and delivered into the KEF hydrant system without relying on vulnerable long-distance supply routes.

// Product

All the performance of Jet A-1, with about a tenth of the emissions

// Impact

The Iceland eSAF Project will have meaningful impact on several groups.

For airlines

Access the eSAF mandated to use, produced in one of the world's most economic locations, and unlock marketing opportunities to the fast-growing sustainable tourism sector that increasingly chooses how it travels.See if our eSAF fits your airline's sustainability needs →

For the climate

A fuel with about a tenth of the lifecycle emissions of fossil jet. Aviation cannot electrify or fly on batteries for the routes that carry most of its emissions, so changing the fuel itself is the route that scales.See how eSAF cuts aviation's emissions →

For investors

Development financing for a first-of-a-kind facility backed by an EU demand mandate that runs to 2050, in a stable, high-skill jurisdiction with low-cost renewable power and high power availability.

For Iceland

A transformation of national energy security: taking a significant bite out of aviation's import dependency, keeping the value of renewable energy at home, and strengthening Iceland's geopolitical standing as a reliable producer of needed fuel, essential to long-term security in the NATO area, and positioning Iceland within Europe's emerging clean aviation industrial base.

// Offtake

Two airlines, two early commitments

ReFuelEU Aviation mandates rising SAF blending at EU airports, from 2% in 2025 to 70% by 20504, with a dedicated sub-mandate for synthetic fuels like eSAF. EEA incorporation is pending. Two airlines committed to eSAF from the Green Industrial Park well before they had to.

Icelandair, 45,000 tonnes per year, MoU signed 2022

In 2022, three years before the first ReFuelEU blending obligation took effect, Icelandair signed a memorandum of understanding with IðunnH2 for up to 45,000 tonnes of eSAF per year from 2028 onwards5. It was an early commitment in a market almost no one was yet supplying at commercial scale, and the kind of forward offtake an eSAF project needs to reach investment decision and secure construction financing.

Founded in 1937, Icelandair is hubbed at Keflavík and was named one of the ten most punctual airlines in Europe in 2023, with a target of cutting carbon emissions 50% per tonne-kilometre by 2030.

“Entering into this memorandum of understanding demonstrates we want to support pioneers working on the development of sustainable aviation fuels in Iceland.”

Bogi Nils Bogason, CEO of Icelandair

Luxaviation, 10,000 tonnes per year, 15-year framework, signed 2025

In July 2025, Luxaviation signed a memorandum of understanding with IðunnH2 for up to 10,000 tonnes of RFNBO-compliant eSAF per year, beginning in 20296. The commitment runs for fifteen years, a long horizon for an offtake agreement at this stage, and the kind of contracted revenue an eSAF project needs at financial close. Luxaviation is one of the world’s largest private aviation operators, headquartered in Luxembourg. In 2024 the group launched what it describes as private aviation’s first real-time carbon calculator inside its client app, grew SAF uplift 59% year on year, and through its ExecuJet subsidiary reached 64% of the way to full ground-handling electrification by 2030, with Paris Le Bourget already fully electric. Our eSAF gives Luxaviation a fuel whose emissions are traceable from production to delivery.

“Today’s agreement with IdunnH2 not only accelerates our SAF ambitions, it also pays tribute to the longstanding aviation bond between our two countries.”

Patrick Hansen, CEO of Luxaviation Group

If your airline or fleet operation needs to secure eSAF supply, we can discuss offtake structures tailored to your requirements.

// Development path

Milestones to first fuel

Securing renewable power, captured CO₂, technology partners, and binding offtake, and then sequencing them into one bankable project, is an undertaking measured in years. Every input and every stage of the production process come with project-specific design considerations that must be solved with specialised partners. The timeline below sets out how ours unfolds.

FEED stage

FEED. Front-end engineering and design, currently being funded. The environmental impact assessment (EIA) is carried out within this stage.

2026

Permitting, EPC selection, offtake negotiation, certification work begun.

2027

FID. Final investment decision. Construction starts.

2028

Construction. Civils, fabrication, electrolyser and MtJ module install.

2029

Commissioning. Staged ramp-up. First commercial fuel delivered into the KEF hydrant system.

2030+

Full operations. Capacity ramp to 70,000 t/yr eSAF.

// Road ahead

We can fly on clean, domestic fuel. This is how it starts.

Aviation will not decarbonise while waiting decades for a new kind of aircraft. The planes flying today, and the planes that will be flying in 2045, run on liquid hydrocarbon fuel. If that fuel continues to come from crude oil, aviation’s contribution to climate change will keep growing. The only way to change the trajectory is to change what goes into the tank.

That is an industrial problem, not a theoretical one. It requires real facilities, built in real places, by people willing to commit capital and years of work to something that has never been done at this scale. The Iceland eSAF Project is one of those facilities. It will not solve the problem alone, but it is part of the generation of projects that proves it can be solved, and in doing so, makes the next generation faster, less expensive, and less risky to build.

The road from first-of-a-kind to established industry is long. It will never be laid unless someone starts.

2029
First year of operation
300MW
Installed capacity
70kt/yr
eSAF at full nameplate
90%
Lower lifecycle CO₂