Dersom brennselcellene er basert på grønn hydrogen og ikke blå eller rød, så er dette muligens veien å gå. (Red.)
ZeroAvia is preparing to start test flights with a Dornier 228 regional airliner fitted with a 600kW hydrogen propulsion system. (Photo: ZeroAvia)
HYDROGEN COMMERCIAL FLIGHTS COULD START BETWEEN UK AND NETHERLANDS IN
2024
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OCTOBER 29, 2021
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Hydrogen-electric commercial air service could start between London and
Rotterdam in 2024, based on a partnership announced this week involving
propulsion system developer ZeroAvia, the Royal Schiphol Group, the Rotterdam
The Hague Airport, and the airport's RTHI innovation foundation. The partners
say they are in advanced talks with prospective airlines to operate the flights
with the 19-seat Dornier 228 twin turboprop that ZeroAvia is using as a
technology demonstrator.
ZeroAvia is already working to develop a 600-kW
hydrogen-fuel-cell-based powertrain that could be used for multiple 19-seater
aircraft. Having secured two Do-228 test aircraft, it intends to start flight
testing the first of these as part of its HyFlyer II program later this year.
One of the test aircraft has been provided by UK-based regional carrier Aurigny
Air.
HyFlyer II's objective is to support a range
of up to around 500 miles, which is significantly farther than the
200-mile London to Rotterdam route. During the earlier HyFlyer I project,
which used a six-seat Piper Malibu aircraft, ZeroAvia said that it achieved
cruise flight fueled entirely by hydrogen-electric power, with batteries used
only for supplementary power during takeoff. The company explained to FutureFlight that
work on the 600 kW system will be conducted in stages, starting with a hybrid
hydrogen fuel cell and battery combination this year, and then progressing to
hydrogen-only flight in mid-2022.
ZeroAvia recently established a company in the
Netherlands, which it says will support its efforts to develop commercial
applications for its propulsion technology in the country and throughout the 27
European Union (EU) member states. It says the new partnership will collaborate
on regulation, testing, and adoption of technology for commercial operations.
The California-based venture also has a subsidiary
in the UK, which has allowed it to benefit from financial support provided by
the UK-government-backed Aerospace Technology Institute. That company, which is
based at Cotswold Airport in the west of England, now has more than 50
employees with more hiring anticipated, as it continues certification work with
the UK Civil Aviation Authority.
“Boarding a zero-emission flight from Rotterdam to
London is only the beginning of green aviation, and that will only be made
possible by pioneering and promoting innovation in the sector,” said Rotterdam
The Hague Airport CEO Ron Louwerse. “With the Netherlands as the testing ground
for aviation, we strengthen our competitive position, knowledge base, and
business climate.”
In the longer term, ZeroAvia intends to be able to
convert larger airliners, with 50 to 100 seats, to hydrogen propulsion. This
would require powertrains rated between 2 and 5 MW.
The original Dornier 228 was in production until
1998 and was powered by a pair of Garrett TPE331 turboprops. In 2009, Ruag
started working on a so-called New Generation version of the aircraft in
partnership with Hindustan Aeronautics, before selling the program to General
Atomics. More recently, the Bavarian state government has been funding a
program led by German aerospace research group DLR and MTU Aero Engines to
develop a hybrid-electric version.
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