Great Green Fleet
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United States Navy The United States Navy (USN) is the naval warfare, maritime military branch, service branch of the United States Department of Defense. It is the world's most powerful navy with the largest Displacement (ship), displacement, at 4.5 millio ...
's Great Green Fleet was an energy cost saving measure announced in 2009 to begin using a combination of conventional diesel fuel and biofuels in a 50/50 mixture. The first demonstration by the USS ''Nimitz'' carrier task group during
RIMPAC The Rim of the Pacific Exercise (RIMPAC) is the world's largest international maritime warfare exercise. RIMPAC is held biennially during June and July of even-numbered years from Honolulu, Hawaii, with the exception of 2020 where it was held ...
(Rim of the Pacific exercise) in 2012 was completed without incident. The Great Green Fleet, the popular nickname, is an homage to the
Great White Fleet The Great White Fleet was the popular nickname for the group of United States Navy battleships that completed a journey around the globe from 16 December 1907, to 22 February 1909, by order of President Foreign policy of the Theodore Roosevelt ...
of the early 20th century.


Overview

Since the 1970s, the world has begun to be acutely aware of the
impact of climate change Effects of climate change are well documented and growing for Earth's natural environment and human societies. Changes to the climate system include an Instrumental temperature record, overall warming trend, Effects of climate change on the ...
and the influence fossil fuels has had on the progress of the natural migrations of climate. The
United States Department of Defense The United States Department of Defense (DoD, USDOD, or DOD) is an United States federal executive departments, executive department of the federal government of the United States, U.S. federal government charged with coordinating and superv ...
is seeking to change the profile of its energy usage. While each branch of the military has its own goals and plans, the Navy's goals were particularly ambitious: * Use 50% less petroleum by 2015 * At least 50% of all energy used by the Navy and Marines come from non-fossil fuel sources by 2020. The Navy's efforts are highlighted by the design of the Great Green Fleet. The carrier, the USS ''Nimitz'', was nuclear powered, but everything else, including the Nimitz's strike aircraft, ran on a 50:50 mix of petroleum and biofuel derived from cooking oil and algae. Fully deployed in 2016, the fleet combines advances in fuels, equipment, and navigation all in an effort to deploy the most energy efficient and modern fleet anywhere in the world. More than six years after it was first announced, the Great Green Fleet made its maiden voyage on late January 20, 2016. Overall, the 2016 Great Green Fleet initiative was a year-long event. The Department of the Navy obtained 77.66 million gallons of cost-competitive, drop-in biofuels blends in support of the launch of the Great Green Fleet at $2.05 per gal. One of the goals of the Navy in its biofuels program is “not to have to sail to the Middle East every time we re-fuel." The Navy aims to deploy a permanent green strike force after 2016. "The Great Green Fleet will signal to the world America's continued naval supremacy, unleashed from the tether of foreign oil." -
Ray Mabus Raymond Edwin Mabus Jr. (; born October 11, 1948) is an American politician and lawyer. A member of the Democratic Party (United States), Democratic Party, he served as the 75th United States Secretary of the Navy from 2009 to 2017. Mabus previo ...
, Secretary of the Navy


Strike group composition

The 2012 fleet was composed of the aircraft carrier USS ''Nimitz'' (CVN 68), the cruiser USS ''Princeton'' (CG 59), the two destroyers USS ''Chafee'' (DDG 90) and USS ''Chung Hoon'' (DDG 93), and the fuel tanker USNS ''Henry J. Kaiser'' (T-AO-187). The 2016 fleet was composed of the aircraft carrier USS ''John C. Stennis'' (CVN 74), guided-missile cruiser USS ''Mobile Bay'' (CG 53), and guided-missile destroyers USS ''Chung Hoon'' (DDG 93), USS ''Stockdale'' (DDG 106) and USS ''William P. Lawrence'' (DDG 110) are all operating in the Indo-Asia-Pacific using alternative fuel.


Concerns

There are reservations from some politicians, as well as military officials that the transition to alternative fuel sources would be too costly. Beyond the strict fuel costs, there are also concerns about the time and resources which would be required to create the necessary support structure to produce the volume of fuel sufficient for the military's needs. During the oil embargo of 1973 there were extensive and costly efforts to develop alternative fuels. A market for these fuels failed to develop, and economical fuels and research and development was not pursued. Many economists and scientists fear that this atmosphere will not develop for the current fuels.


Benefits

The Navy's goals will further their own objectives, but will also have far-reaching effects in the US and beyond. Reducing US reliance on foreign petroleum has numerous strategic advantages, and could work to avert future conflicts centered around the acquisition of petroleum stores. The call for alternative fuels has already begun to drive innovation, with companies striving to create efficient processes to bring biofuel availability to the necessary scale the military requires. Energy companies Solazyme (CA) and Dynamic Fuels (LA) are working towards numerous fuels and competing for the contracts offered by the U.S Department of Defense, and continued studies by military and civilian researchers will build momentum in both the scientific community, as well as the energy marketplace. Studies have also shown a decrease in particulate emissions from the use of algal biofuels versus naval diesel fuel. Crossover and cooperation with the civilian marketplace is already underway with comparable studies and efforts underway in civilian aviation and maritime fleets. As all these efforts come together, we may see public acceptance for biofuels grow, and a demand for cleaner, more efficient fuels from populations across the globe.


References

{{Reflist United States Navy in the 21st century Alternative fuels