Norway to make all short-haul flights electric by 2040
Airport operator wants Scandinavian nation to be 'first in the world'
to switch to air transport powered by electricity
·
Josh
Gabbatiss Science Correspondent
·
6 hours ago
Click to follow
The Independent Online
The Independent Online
All short-haul flights in Norway
will be entirely electric by 2040, in plans made by the nation’s public
operator of air transport.
State-owned Avinor, which operates
most of Norway’s civil airports, is aiming to be the “first in the world” to
switch to electric air transport, according to its chief executive Dag
Falk-Petersen.
“We think that all flights lasting
up to 1.5 hours can be flown by aircraft that are entirely electric,” he told
AFP.
The announcement confirms Norway’s
reputation as a leader in electric power.
Last year, energy think tank Energi
Norge said it was possible for Norway to become the first country powered by
100 per cent clean electricity.
“Our target is for Norway, based on
hydro power and better collaboration between businesses and the authorities, to
become the world’s first fully electric society by 2050,” Oluf Ulseth, the
director of Energi Norge, told NTB.
Norway is able to leverage its
abundance of rivers and waterfalls to produce the majority of its electricity
using hydropower.
The Scandinavian nation has also
been a pioneer in moving away from fossil
fuel-powered vehicles, with politicians suggesting all cars in
the country could run on green energy by 2025.
By comparison, UK climate
advisers have recommended that
the Government should aim to make around 60 per cent of new cars and vans
electric by 2030.
In a 2017
report, Avinor announced that in cooperation with
the Norwegian Sports Aviation Association and major airlines, it had set
up a development project for electric aircraft.
Avinor said it had “called for
Norway to be established as a test arena and innovation centre for the
development of electric aircraft”.
Major companies such as Airbus,
Boeing and Siemens believe electric planes carrying up to 70 passengers on
short-haul flights will be possible within the next decade, and easyJet
is collaborating with American
start-up Wright Electric to help develop the technology.
Wright Electric has said it
aims “for every short flight to be electric within 20 years”.
Avinor intends to reduce aircraft
greenhouse gas emissions in the short term by phasing in biofuels in the coming
years, and then build on these reductions by phasing in electric planes.
“What’s particularly exciting is
that you’ll reduce costs to passengers to a much lower level,” Jan Otto
Reimers, special adviser at Avinor told NRK.
“The planes will become similar to
buses, and will be far more effective than trains or other means of transport.
Simultaneously, they’ll have a fantastic environmental profile.”
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