• Converts agricultural and forestry waste into renewable marine fuel, gasoline, and SAF
• Offers “drop-in” lower-carbon alternatives for hard-to-abate sectors like shipping
• Modular design lowers installation costs and accelerates project deployment
Converting Waste into Drop-In Renewable Fuels
Honeywell has launched a new technology that turns agricultural and forestry waste into ready-to-use renewable fuels for carbon-intensive sectors, including shipping and aviation. The Biocrude Upgrading process produces low-carbon marine fuel, gasoline, and sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) from widely available biomass such as wood chips and crop residues.
The innovation targets one of the most stubborn challenges in global decarbonisation: replacing heavy fuel oil in the maritime industry. These “drop-in” renewable fuels can be used directly in existing engines without costly retrofits, while offering a higher energy density than many biofuel alternatives—extending vessel range and operational efficiency.
Ken West, president of Honeywell Energy and Sustainability Solutions, said the company’s technology aligns with growing demand for scalable, cost-effective alternatives. “The maritime industry has a real need for renewable fuels that are immediately available and cost effective. Our Biocrude Upgrading processing technology can be delivered in modular form, offering savings from installation through to refining and use,” West said.


Decentralized Production, Central Refining
The Biocrude Upgrading process begins with converting biomass waste into a biocrude at collection sites, minimising transportation emissions and costs. The resulting feedstock is then refined at larger industrial facilities to produce fuels with performance comparable to conventional options.
By allowing biocrude conversion closer to the source and refining at scale, Honeywell’s model addresses one of the key logistical barriers to biomass-based fuels—costly feedstock transport and low energy yield.
The modular design further accelerates deployment by reducing construction timelines. Prefabricated plants can be installed faster than traditional facilities, offering a route to commercial-scale renewable fuel production with lower upfront risk.
Maritime Decarbonization Pressures Mount
The technology arrives as the global shipping industry faces intensifying regulatory and market pressure to curb emissions. Since the 1960s, heavy fuel oil—derived from the residues of gasoline and diesel refining—has powered most of the world’s merchant fleet, contributing roughly 3% of global greenhouse gas emissions.
Decarbonizing shipping remains a major technical and financial challenge. Alternative fuels like green methanol and ammonia are advancing but face infrastructure, storage, and safety constraints. Honeywell’s renewable marine fuel option could serve as a near-term transition pathway, leveraging existing port and vessel systems while reducing lifecycle emissions.
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Expanding Honeywell’s Renewable Fuels Portfolio
The Biocrude Upgrading technology complements Honeywell’s expanding portfolio of renewable and synthetic fuel solutions. Over the past decade, the company has developed multiple pathways, including Ecofining™ for hydroprocessed esters and fatty acids (HEFA) fuels, Ethanol to Jet (ETJ) for alcohol-based SAF production, Fischer-Tropsch Unicracking™ for advanced syngas conversion, and UOP eFining™—a system that turns green hydrogen and captured CO₂ into e-fuels.
Together, these systems reflect Honeywell’s integrated approach to low-carbon fuel production, spanning feedstock flexibility, process efficiency, and carbon intensity reduction.
Implications for Investors and Policymakers
For investors and policymakers, Honeywell’s move highlights the accelerating convergence between industrial innovation and climate policy. As regulators tighten emissions standards and corporate customers demand cleaner logistics, scalable waste-to-fuel technologies are gaining strategic importance.
Beyond maritime transport, the modular biocrude model could influence how future SAF and renewable gasoline supply chains are structured—shifting production closer to agricultural hubs and aligning with circular economy principles.
With shipping responsible for nearly a billion tonnes of CO₂ emissions annually, solutions that blend compatibility, scalability, and affordability are likely to shape the next phase of energy transition in transport. Honeywell’s latest technology positions it squarely within that shift—where waste becomes feedstock, and decarbonisation becomes practical.
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