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In a landmark achievement for sustainable aviation, Air France’s Airbus A220-300 has successfully completed its inaugural ferry flight from Mirabel Airport (YMX) in Canada to Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport (CDG) powered by a blend of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF). This historic delivery not only marks a milestone for Air France but also represents the first time Airbus has issued official sustainability credentials for SAF directly to an airline customer, signaling a significant step forward in the industry’s decarbonization journey.
The newly delivered Air France A220-300, christened VAISON-LA-ROMAINE and the airline’s 46th in this fleet, demonstrated remarkable environmental benefits. Over the course of its ferry flight, the use of SAF reduced lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions by more than 25 tonnes compared to traditional fossil fuels. This achievement reflects Airbus’ ability to provide Proof of Sustainability (PoS) through the CORSIA Sustainability Certification Scheme, ensuring verified emission reductions linked to SAF consumption.
For Air France-KLM, one of the world’s largest buyers of sustainable aviation fuel, the integration of SAF at the point of aircraft delivery represents a key transparency enhancement, accelerating SAF adoption across the aviation sector. The airline group stresses that combining new, more efficient aircraft with SAF is central to meeting its decarbonization targets for medium-haul operations.
Since introducing SAF deliveries at its Mirabel manufacturing facility, Airbus has progressively integrated sustainable fuels into A220 production, acceptance tests, and now delivery flights. In 2025 alone, the Mirabel site anticipates saving around 400 metric tonnes of CO2 emissions through the use of approximately 170,000 liters of pure SAF.
This local effort complements Airbus’ worldwide sustainability commitment, where 78% of all aircraft delivered in the first half of the year featured SAF blends. Airbus aims for full SAF compatibility across its entire fleet by 2030. Currently, A220 aircraft are certified to operate with up to 50% SAF blends, showcasing both advanced technical readiness and adherence to evolving regulations.
The sustainable aviation fuel used on this flight is certified to reduce lifecycle emissions by up to 85% compared to conventional jet fuel. This reduction is accounted for using a mass balance system that tracks certified SAF volumes alongside regular Jet A-1 fuel, ensuring a transparent and auditable chain of custody. Airbus emphasizes this approach as vital for maintaining operational feasibility while driving greater SAF transparency.
Since introducing its first A220 in 2021 as part of a 60-aircraft order, Air France has leveraged the model’s efficiency to reduce per-seat fuel burn and CO2 emissions by up to 25% compared to older aircraft generations. The A220 family remains a cornerstone in both Airbus’ and Air France’s sustainability strategies, combining advancing aircraft efficiency with the accelerating adoption of sustainable fuels.
As the aviation industry charts its path to a low-carbon future, Air France and Airbus’ collaboration on SAF delivery flights underscores the tangible progress being made toward cleaner skies—one sustainably fueled journey at a time.