easyjet is first major airline to move
towards hydrogen-powered flight
January 10, 2022
TAGS: CAeS, Cranfield Aerospace Solutions, EasyJet, Hydrogen Propulsion
easyJet is set to become the world’s
first major airline to use green hydrogen fuelled aircraft on commercial
flights.
The carrier is the first major
international airline to announce plans to use hydrogen cell technology on
passenger flights. easyJet will partner with Cranfield Aerospace Solutions
(CaeS) to develop the technology, which could be in use as early as 2030.
CAeS has been awarded £7.5 million for
development and the project has been approved by Transport Secretary Grant
Shapps and the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA). The company is currently
developing a nine-seater Britten-Normander plane to fly for 60 minutes with 45
minutes reserve fuel time but believes longer flight times will be achieved as
the technology matures.
The budget carrier is initially looking
to use hydrogen for medium haul flights from its British airports. easyJet
currently fly from Aberdeen, Belfast, Birmingham, Bournemouth, Bristol,
Edinburgh, Glasgow, Inverness, Isle of Man, Jersey, Liverpool, Leeds/Bradford,
Manchester, Gatwick, Heathrow, Luton, Newquay and Southampton.
Hydrogen propulsion is “front-runner” for short haul airlines
David Morgan, Director of Flight
Operations at easyJet said: “We remain absolutely committed to sustainable
flying and towards a future with zero-emission flying. Technology is a key
driver to achieve our decarbonisation targets with Hydrogen propulsion a
front-runner for short-haul airlines like us.”
“We look forward to collaborating with
Cranfield Aerospace Solutions to support bringing this technology to maturity
as soon as possible.”
Paul Hutton, Chief Executive of
Cranfield Aerospace Solutions said: “We are committed to ensuring the
wide-spread adoption of zero-emissions aircraft and for this to succeed the
solutions must be commercially viable. easyJet, as one of Europe’s leading
airlines is ideally placed to help shape our development.”
easyJet pilots, engineers and
maintenance experts will work closely with the Cranfield team.
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