Westminster to Munich

Happy Friday Friends.
Well last week was one for the books, a proper blend of insight, inspiration and international perspective. It’s not often you find yourself standing in the historic corridors of Westminster one day, and walking among construction giants in Munich the next. But that’s exactly where Syntech Biofuel found itself and myself thanks to our fuel and the collaborations with important friends like Balfour Beatty, the whole experience has left me both excited and hugely energised for what’s next.
At the Heart of the Future – Lower Thames Crossing Parliamentary Reception
We kicked the week off in the beating heart of UK politics, attending the Lower Thames Crossing Consortium’s parliamentary reception. There’s something powerful about being in a room full of MPs, policymakers and industry leaders who are all pushing in the same direction towards a lower carbon, more sustainable construction future.
The LTC project, which I’ve waxed lyrical many times now and already hailed as a model for greener infrastructure, has created a powerful platform for innovative suppliers like Syntech to show what’s possible when sustainability is embedded from the start. We’ve been supplying our advanced renewable fuels into the project since early trials, and it’s been gratifying to see just how positively the supply chain has responded.
What stood out in the conversations we had at Westminster was the real appetite for ethical, traceable, and genuinely low-emission solutions. In that context, I couldn’t help but bring up the recent BBC report investigating HVO which made a busy week even busier as our inboxes were overwhelmed with questions ranging from “Have you seen this?” to “Can this be really true?”.
For those who missed it, the BBC took a hard look at the use of Hydrotreated Vegetable Oil (HVO) and raised important points about feedstock origin, supply chain transparency, and the potential environmental trade-offs when virgin crops or unsustainable palm oil enter the equation.
We welcome this kind of scrutiny. In fact, we’ve been calling for it. Because for Syntech, sustainability doesn’t start at the tailpipe, it starts at the source. Every litre of Syntech ASB we produce is certified waste-derived, traceable, and free from virgin palm oil or high ILUC (indirect land use change) feedstocks.
The BBC’s investigation highlighted just how essential that is. It’s not enough to swap one fuel for another, the industry needs to get smarter about the full lifecycle impact, and we’re proud to already be operating to that standard.
If anything, the report validated the route we’ve taken. The support Balfour Beatty have given, and give us shows that doing the right thing is powerful and karma really does exist.
Ethical biofuels aren’t a compromise, for Syntech, they’re a commitment. And it’s one we’ll keep pushing for across every infrastructure project we touch.
Indulge me while I pontificate again – Syntech ASB is Made in Britain from used cooking oil from Britain, providing fuel and energy security for Britain. Boom!
Bauma, Munich – Engineering Tomorrow
From the Commons to the construction world, just two days later, I found myself in Munich at Bauma, the world’s largest trade fair for construction machinery and equipment.
Think of it as Glastonbury for gearheads – sprawling stands filled with excavators, piling cranes, diggers and dump trucks and things that looked quite frankly like a lot like stuff that Thunderbird 2 might have dropped off, the future of construction in steel and software. (google Thunderbirds if under 30).
What hit home in Munich was how aligned global manufacturers are becoming with the low-carbon agenda. Whether it was hybrid systems, alternative fuel compatibility or telematics for emissions monitoring, the industry is finally designing machines with the energy transition in mind.
We had great discussions with OEMs looking to validate our fuel in their engines, the good kind, that is. It’s no longer a fringe question. Sustainability is no longer a cost centre – It’s a corporate strategy.
And with Syntech’s work in the UK setting a real-world precedent, it felt like the right time to explore broader collaborations that could shape how equipment is fuelled across Europe.
This week made one thing abundantly clear, the shift to sustainable construction isn’t coming, it’s here. From parliamentary backing to technical innovation on the continent, the momentum is real.
But as the BBC rightly pointed out, not all solutions are created equal. If we’re going to decarbonise construction for good, we’ve got to build on trust, transparency and impact, not shortcuts, and I’ll keep doing just that.
Thanks for reading, have a beautiful weekend.
Mike
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