British Air Force aims to
be world’s first service with certified zero-carbon aircraft
By: Andrew Chuter 3 days
ago
23
The zero-carbon aircraft
would replace the Tutor T1 planes, shown, currently providing elementary flight
training for the British military. (Adrian Dennis/AFP via Getty Images)
LONDON —
Britain’s Royal Air Force has set a goal of becoming the first military service
in the world to register and certify a zero-carbon aircraft.
The service
has already tapped industry for exploitable technology to start replacing a
fleet of RAF light training aircraft. If the program goes as planned, Britain
could have their first zero-carbon platform flying by around 2027, according to
a market exploration document released in July by the government’s Defence and
Security Accelerator organization.
“The decision
has been taken to ensure that the next generation aircraft will produce zero
carbon emissions at the point of use. This target must be achieved through more
environmentally sympathetic aircraft using a sustainable fuel source such as
electric or hydrogen; the goal is to achieve the first military registered and
certified zero-carbon aircraft in the world,” the DASA document read. “An entry into service date of circa 2027 is
anticipated.”
However, Armed
Forces Minister James Heappey was more vague about a possible in-service date
when he responded to questions about the project in Parliament on July 21. “It
is expected that the RAF will have its first zero-emission aircraft operational
by the end of this decade,” he told lawmakers.
The new
aircraft is to replace 90 piston-powered Grob 115 aircraft, colloquially known
as Tutor T1 planes, currently providing elementary flight training for the
British military.
The aircraft
project, led by the RAF’s Rapid Capabilities Office, will feed into a wider
program known as Project Telum — an end-to-end solution aimed at modernizing
elementary flight training, including the use of synthetic and virtual training.
The
competition for Project Telum is slated to start in 2023, but Heappey said the
date remains unconfirmed.
The original intention had
been to replace the Tutor T1 planes with another conventionally powered
aircraft, but the change in thinking is being driven by a much wider RAF effort
toward achieving zero-carbon by 2040, 10 years ahead of the
government’s national policy of being carbon neutral by 2050.
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