Japan created synthetic fuel using water, CO₂, and renewable energy.
ENEOS Corporation built a demo plant in Yokohama that:
Captures CO₂ from the air
Extracts hydrogen from water using renewable electricity
Combines them through Fischer–Tropsch synthesis to create liquid fuel
The result is real synthetic petroleum that works in existing:
Cars
Airplanes
Ships
Fuel pipelines
No engine modifications needed — it’s “drop-in ready.” Actual vehicles were successfully tested with the fuel.
Why this matters:
Countries without oil reserves could produce their own fuel
Aviation and shipping gain a cleaner alternative where batteries struggle
Global energy dependence could shift dramatically
The challenge:
The process consumes huge amounts of electricity
One liter of synthetic fuel requires enough power to drive an EV roughly 200 km
Costs remain too high for large-scale adoption
ENEOS paused the project because the economics weren’t practical yet, but the technology itself proved possible. If production costs fall in the future, synthetic fuels could reshape global energy markets.
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