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Aerospace Global News
caught up with Heart Aerospace CEO and co-founder Anders Forslund to discuss
ongoing developments in the ES-30 programme.
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With Heart Aerospace having recently announced two significant changes
to its ongoing operations – including major design amendments and a new US
R&D hub – Aerospace Global News caught up with CEO and co-founder Anders
Forslund to discuss ongoing developments.
“To be
successful as an aerospace company, in this century, you need to be good at
managing change and not be afraid to make changes,” explains Forslund, whose
company is currently designing and developing the ES-30 clean-sheet electric
regional aircraft. However, although Heart is “definitely not seeing [electric
propulsion] as a partisan technology,” the electric propulsion pioneer
nevertheless has an ambitious task ahead as it looks to commence its flight
test programme in the first half of 2025.
Airframe amendments
In May 2024,
Swedish startup Heart unveiled a series of not insignificant redesigns to its
30-seat concept, representing a move from an electric series hybrid design to
what the company terms “independent electric hybrid propulsion”. Gone are the
strut-braced wings, the winglets, the battery bay below the fuselage and the
turbogenerator, the latter of which Forslund says isn’t yet available on the
market in a sufficiently mature capacity.
Instead, the
four-engine ES-30 will now feature two electric motors inboard, augmented with
two off-the-shelf turboprops outboard to act as range extenders. No suppliers
have yet been announced (with Forslund suggesting it may well be “presumptuous”
to assume the ubiquitous P&WC PT6 will be the thermal powerplant of
choice). However, “the great thing about this choice is that there is some
optionality,” he elaborates, citing elevated industry support for the new
configuration.
Although the
company has no plans at present to look at re-integrating initial design
elements of its purely electric concept, “we’re venturing into a design place
that is much less explored than any aircraft we have built in the last decade,
so we need to have a different approach,” adds Forslund. This is the second
significant redesign for the platform, following the move from a 19-seat
variant to the ES-30 in September 2022.
US research and development hub
It’s not
just the ES-30 that’s received a radical redesign in recent months, with Heart
also having announced a new R&D hub in LA, from where the first
demonstrator aircraft should roll out in September (inkeeping with initial
timescales). Its headquarters will remain in Sweden.
Describing
LA as “one of the top hotspots for talent,” there is also “such a strong draw
in the US market for what we’re doing,” elaborates Forslund. This is, in part,
exemplified by Heart’s numerous investors located stateside; including Bill
Gates’ Breakthrough Energy and United Airlines. Although speculation remains
over a potential Trump presidency curtailing support for decarbonisation
projects, Forslund says there is nevertheless a “great potential for electric
planes in the US,” with electric aviation representing “both the
decarbonisation and the democratisation of things”.
“As we go
into growing this company, we’re not constraining ourselves to any one
geography,” he continues, adding that the biggest impact electric aircraft will
have is in rural or underserved areas. Citing the some 5,000 airports in the US
available for regional connectivity, existing operators didn’t stop flying
these routes due to lack of range: but rather, “it was because it didn’t make
enough sense from a unit economics point of view”. Although inevitably tied to
the ongoing maturation of battery technology, Heart currently projects a hybrid
range of 400km for its ES-30 by the end of the decade.
Ongoing advancements
Discussions
continue with EASA and the FAA regarding certification, while Heart confirms it
has sufficient funding to power it through the upcoming flight test programme;
with Forslund attributing ongoing “strong support” to Heart’s projected
profitability of operations. “It’s [in] this phase of the hype cycle that the
lessons are being learned,” he says, adding: “Having sound economic
fundamentals of what you’re doing, managing risk in a good way, showing you
have a good plan to execute on certified viability steps – those things matter
a lot”.
To date,
Heart Aerospace has secured 250 orders for the ES-30, with options and purchase
rights for another 120 aircraft. The company also has letters of intent for a
further 191 units.
A recent
audit advisory board with airline partners has also seen Heart welcome new
members to the group, including Air Asia and Loganair. As well as making sure
the aircraft is applicable to a multitude of different operational scenarios,
this “shows the breadth and robustness of the demand for an aircraft such as
the ES-30,” concludes Forslund.
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