The International Air Transport Association (IATA) has launched the Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) Registry with its release to the Civil Aviation Decarbonisation Organisation (CADO).
The Registry, now live under CADO management, will enable a global market for SAF that will accelerate the transition to net zero emissions by 2050.
IATA’s Senior Vice President Sustainability and Chief Economist, Marie Owens Thomsen, explained: “Aviation’s decarbonisation is a team effort. In releasing the SAF Registry to CADO for launch, we have put in place a critical platform for the benefit of all stakeholders. It ensures that all airlines in the world have access to SAF and that their SAF purchases can be claimed against any climate-related obligations in this domain.
“The Registry will record the environmental attributes of SAF purchases in an immutable way, safeguarding against double counting. Airlines, their corporate customers, fuel producers, regulatory bodies, and all related organisations will be able to record and account for their SAF transactions in a global market for SAF.
“While this is of fundamental importance and a historically momentous advance, it is but one step along the way to a mature, transparent, and liquid global SAF market. The Registry cannot produce miracles on its own, but without it, no miracles can be produced.
“Further progress requires active policy support for the ramping-up of all renewable energy production, and for SAF within that production. Governments must reallocate their direct support given to fossil fuel producers in favour of renewable energy production.
“The precedent of the wind and solar energy markets is the example to follow, and this without any further delay”.
The SAF Registry is a global system to record SAF transactions in a standardised and transparent way. It ensures that the environmental benefits of SAF can be tracked as they move across the SAF value chain and enable the claiming of these against regulatory obligations and voluntary schemes by airlines and corporate customers.
The Registry helps solve the challenge of limited SAF supply, which is acutely scarce and available in only a few locations globally by connecting airlines with SAF producers and suppliers, regardless of their geographical location.
In addition, it gives airlines’ corporate customers access to in-sector emissions reductions and capitalises on firms’ capacity to co-finance the cost of decarbonisation.
The SAF Registry is technology and feedstock neutral, favouring the emergence of diverse SAF production streams across the world. It will be able to accommodate specific regulations, while favouring global harmonisation. Moreover, interoperability with other registries is an important feature of the Registry, supporting competition and open markets.
The Registry was developed in consultation with airlines, government authorities, OEMs, fuel producers and suppliers, and corporate travel management companies.
The Civil Aviation Decarbonisation Organisation (CADO) was created in March 2025 to maintain and operate the IATA-developed SAF Registry. It is a not-for-profit organisation established under Canadian Law with its headquarters in Montreal.
CADO’s founding member is the International Air Transport Association (IATA) which provides ongoing technical and operational support for the SAF Registry.
Membership in CADO is open to international organisations and companies in the SAF value chain.