The Guardian (USA)

EasyJet joins calls for UK government to help fund hydrogen-powered flight

- Gwyn Topham Transport correspond­ent

EasyJet has joined aerospace manufactur­ers in urging the government to help fund hydrogen-powered flight, as the carrier launched an operation out of Birmingham airport – its first new UK base since 2012.

The airline, along with companies including Airbus, Rolls-Royce and GKN, said hydrogen planes could be a reality by the end of the next decade, setting out a detailed roadmap to change the sector.

Its chief executive, Johan Lundgren, said there had been “astonishin­g” progress and that the UK could be a leader in pioneering the technology, but said: “What needs to happen is not to just fly an aircraft, but how you industrial­ise it.”

Hydrogen has been touted by some as the only truly zero-emission longterm solution for decarbonis­ing aviation, although big logistical challenges remain.

A report from the companies, under the banner of the Hydrogen in Aviation Alliance, called for public funding to support the transition, as part of a number of steps needed including ensuring regulation was in place, preparing airport infrastruc­ture, developing the supply of hydrogen and the necessary skilled workforce.

Lundgren said the sums needed for research and developmen­t were “staggering” but had to be seen as a longterm investment.

He said: “[The report is] the first time we’ve had everyone across the board saying what’s needed, from experts across the field, setting out actions by timeline before we can see hydrogen aircraft in the sky at a large scale.

“The breakthrou­ghs in hydrogenpo­wered technology happening across the UK are truly astonishin­g but these advances will be inconseque­ntial if we fail to complement them with the appropriat­e skills, infrastruc­ture, investment and regulation needed.”

Alan Newby, the director of research and technology at Rolls-Royce, said the industry was “making great progress on technology” but there were significan­t infrastruc­ture challenges, including the transporta­tion of hydrogen and refuelling planes. There was also little availabili­ty of hydrogen created from renewable electricit­y, he said. “Green hydrogen is just not around. That needs to go up the food chain.”

Russ Dunn, the chief technology officer of GKN Aerospace, said hydrogen was “a unique opportunit­y for truly zero-emission flight”, adding: “I truly believe in the next decade we will see hydrogen in flight – but only if airports and infrastruc­ture are there. That means the right government policy and regulation­s to be ready to transfer aviation into a sustainabl­e future.”

Airbus has said it is “firmly focused” on getting a 100-seat hydrogenpo­wered aircraft in the air by 2035.

EasyJet said it hoped to have such

planes in service by 2040. Lundgren said there were still unanswered questions before mass hydrogen flight became viable, but added: “We wouldn’t be on this journey if we didn’t think there was a very good prospect of them being resolved.”

The easyJet boss was speaking as the airline launched a new base at Birmingham airport, where it will site three planes and expand its network with 16 new routes, creating 140 jobs. The routes include business capitals and summer holiday destinatio­ns around the Mediterran­ean.

The airline will also fly domestical­ly to Glasgow from Birmingham, theoretica­lly less than four hours away on a direct train on Avanti West Coast. Asked how flying domestic routes sat with talk of sustainabi­lity, Lundgren said it was good if consumers were “mindful about that”, but added: “We do know that if a train alternativ­e is starting to [take] more than two and a half hours, then people gravitate towards flying – that’s just the way it is.”

 ?? Photograph: Joanna Plucinska/ Reuters ?? Johan Lundgren on the asphalt at Birmingham airport on Monday, where the airline will site three planes.
Photograph: Joanna Plucinska/ Reuters Johan Lundgren on the asphalt at Birmingham airport on Monday, where the airline will site three planes.

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