Harbour Air to switch to battery-powered aircraft
Harbour Air Seaplanes has announced plans to transform
into the world's first all-electric airline.
The B.C.-based company
announced a partnership with magniX that will make it the first seaplane airline
to start making the conversion to all-electric planes.
Dubbed the Harbour
Air ePlane, a DHC-2 de Havilland Beaver will be the first to be converted. The
aircraft will be powered by the magni500, a 750-horsepower all-electric motor.
This engine would make the ePlane more powerful than the gas-powered de
Havilland Beaver by 70 horsepower.
The planes would be virtually silent
except for propeller noise.
"The reality is transportation is going
electric, just because its practical. And it's becoming more practical all the
time just based on the advancement of battery technology," Harbour Air CEO Greg
McDougall said.
"Short stage lengths and single-engine aircraft, which
don't require as much energy to fly, so that puts us in a unique position that
we can actually take advantage of the technology."
The announcement is
just the start of the process to converting the fleet.
"Step one is to
have a prototype flying, which will prove the technology and then go through the
regulatory process of proving of the safety standard" McDougall
said.
Aerospace analyst Richard Aboulafia of the U.S.-based Teal Group
has doubts about the feasibility of completely battery-powered
aircraft.
"It's an aggressive timeframe, it's starting to be feasible for
very small planes. When it comes to electric power sources it's really all about
the range and the size of the plane," Aboulafia said.
"Maybe you have a
central turbine that charges (batteries) up and also distributes power directly
to propellers or fans or whatever else, that is probably in the 2030s or 2040s
but absolute battery-powered flight that's really a very long ways off if ever -
aside from very small planes of course."
Founded in 1982, Harbour Air
began as a service for the forest industry with with two small seaplanes. The
airline now has more than 40 aircraft that make up to 300 flights a day to 12
destinations.
Abonner på:
Legg inn kommentarer (Atom)
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.