National Post (National Edition)

Mach 3 craft not just stuff of fiction

Virgin Galactic, Rolls-Royce dreaming big

- CHARLOTTE RYAN

Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic Holdings Inc. will work with engine maker Rolls-Royce Holdings PLC to develop a plane that can travel at three times the speed of sound.

The recruitmen­t of RollsRoyce, which provided the engines for Concorde, the world’s only civil-certified supersonic aircraft to date, is aimed at devising a propulsion system that’s both cutting-edge and sustainabl­e, Virgin Galactic chief space officer George Whiteside said in a statement Monday.

The Spaceship Co., Virgin Galactic’s manufactur­ing division, is seeking to develop a Mach 3 delta-winged aircraft that would fly at an altitude above 60,000 feet and carry between nine and 16 people in a premium cabin, while taking off and landing like any other passenger plane at existing airports.

Plans for a return to supersonic passenger flight following Concorde’s exit from service in 2003 have been gathering pace over the past decade. That push has been called into question as aviation becomes a prime target for climate campaigner­s, with projects now facing the challenge of cutting carbon emissions and reducing noise as well as making flights viable.

The accord with RollsRoyce comes after the Virgin Galactic program cleared a mission-concept review that included representa­tives from the U.S. National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion, and the Federal Aviation Administra­tion backed work on an certificat­ion framework for the plane.

The next step will involve developing the design, deciding which materials to use, and addressing the CO2 hurdle and problems posed by the sonic boom that comes with breaking the sound barrier, which were a major factor in limiting Concorde to a handful of routes, Virgin Galactic said.

The high-speed plane project is separate to Virgin Galactic’s main space venture, which aims to launch affluent adventure-seekers into suborbital flight before the end of this year.

Branson, who founded Virgin Galactic, has reduced his stake in the company to around one-third after selling shares to help raise money to support other group ventures including Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd.

The partnershi­p with Rolls-Royce comes after the U.K. engine maker last week announced a pact with Boom Technology Inc., one of three startups that have been competing to bring a new supersonic market in the next few years.

Virgin Galactic closed 1.57 per cent higher at US$24.02 a share Monday in New York and has almost doubled in price this year. Rolls-Royce declined 4 per cent and has lost two-thirds of its value in 2020.

 ?? COURTESY VIRGIN GALACTIC ?? Virgin Galactic and Rolls-Royce are eyeing a plane, design pictured, that can travel at three times the speed of sound.
COURTESY VIRGIN GALACTIC Virgin Galactic and Rolls-Royce are eyeing a plane, design pictured, that can travel at three times the speed of sound.

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