Course Overview
The global transition toward low-carbon fuels is accelerating, driven by tightening climate policies, energy security concerns, and hard-to-abate sectors such as aviation and shipping.
Biofuels and synthetic fuels are no longer theoretical solutions — they are actively shaping investment decisions, industrial strategies, and policy frameworks today. However, the landscape is complex:
- Feedstock availability limits biofuel scalability
- Synthetic fuels depend heavily on hydrogen and renewable power
- Policy frameworks (EU, US, global) are determining market viability
- Many announced projects struggle to reach final investment decisions
This course provides a practical, decision-oriented understanding of sustainable fuels — focusing on what is actually being deployed, what will scale, and why.
Participants will gain the tools to evaluate technologies, assess real-world opportunities, and understand how fuels fit into broader energy transition strategies.
Why This Course Matters
The sustainable fuels sector is evolving rapidly, but only a limited number of pathways will prove commercially viable at scale. While ambition and policy support are strong, real-world deployment is constrained by feedstock availability, hydrogen economics, and project feasibility challenges.
Investment decisions today are being made under significant uncertainty, where technical promise does not always translate into bankable projects.
This course helps professionals focus on practical, scalable, and investment-ready solutions, enabling better judgment on which technologies and fuel pathways are likely to succeed in real markets.
Who Should Attend
This course is designed for professionals involved in:
- Energy & utilities
- Oil & gas / downstream / refining
- Aviation & shipping sectors
- Sustainability & ESG strategy
- Project development & investment
- Government & policy advisory
- Technology providers & consultants