National Post

THE SKY IS THE LIMIT

A HANDFUL OF THE WORLD’S MAJOR AIRLINES ARE BETTING ON ELECTRIC FOR THE FUTURE OF FLIGHT

- EDWARD RUSSELL

WE NEED TO DO WHAT WE CAN TO SUPPORT ALL THE TECHNOLOGY BECAUSE WE’RE GOING TO NEED IT ALL. NEXT-GENERATION AIRCRAFT WILL BE PART OF THE SOUL FOR AVIATION. — KIRI HANNIFIN, CHIEF SUSTAINABI­LITY OFFICER OF AIR NEW ZEALAND

Last November, a small, white, oblong helicopter with four passenger seats and six whirring electric engines took off from the Downtown Manhattan Heliport.

Several people, including Mayor Eric Adams, watched as the air taxi known as an EVTOL — an electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft — flew silently, undetected by nearby pedestrian­s along the East River.

“To bring electric flight and the benefits of electric flight here is a dream come true,” said Joeben Bevirt, the CEO of Joby Aviation, to the crowd. Joby is just one of dozens of firms around the world betting on EVTOLS. Their backers include some of aviation’s biggest names, such as Delta Air Lines, United Airlines and Embraer.

Many airlines and aviation companies are experiment­ing with new technologi­es not only to manage relentless economic pressure to be an affordable choice for transporta­tion but also to be more environmen­tally friendly. Besides the move to electric engines, airlines are investigat­ing options for fuel such as hydrogen and repurposed fuels and the re-emergence of supersonic flight. Investors have spent an estimated $22.2 billion, according to a report published by the Mckinsey Center for Future Mobility. Most companies aim to fly their new offerings in noticeable numbers by the end of this decade — or relegate them to the trash heap of history while they pursue other options.

“You need to have a similar revolution as (with) the electric car,” said Anders Forslund, co-founder and CEO of the Swedish company Heart Aerospace.

Modern airplanes are more efficient and safer than they were when the 707, Boeing’s first jetliner, debuted in 1958. Boeing’s latest longrange model, the 787, looks similar, even if the engineerin­g is much improved.

“This is an industry based upon remarkable, sustained, incrementa­l progress,” said Richard Aboulafia, a managing director at Aerodynami­c Advisory, in explaining the glacial pace of change in design.

Heart Aerospace intends to change that reputation. Engineers are developing a 30-seat electric turboprop plane, the ES-30, with backing from the likes of Air Canada, Saab and United. The plan is to be operationa­l by 2028. While the ES-30 looks like the prop planes that already fly passengers to small towns around the world, it could be revolution­ary if certified: It does not emit carbon while it flies, and it is quiet. The lower cost of operating the ES-30 could also

help airlines reopen routes where flights disappeare­d years ago.

Electric planes have their disadvanta­ges, too. Battery capacity, despite recent improvemen­ts, does not equal the energy density of jet fuel. Installing a larger battery would add significan­t weight to a plane. To compensate, the planes would have to reduce the number of passenger seats to roughly 40 to 50. Last year, domestic flights averaged 132 seats per flight, according to the aviation data analytics firm Cirium Diio.

Flying range would also be limited. An electric plane must fly within a few hundred miles; the average distance flown today is 770 miles.

“In 2030, we’re not going to be able to cover all the (airline) routes, but we’re going to be able to cover the routes up to 500 miles with reserves,” said Kyle Clark, co-founder and CEO of Beta Technologi­es.

“We’ve already seen (batteries) doubling in energy density,” continued Clark. The company first flew an electric test plane in 2017, proving that battery-powered planes can fly. Certificat­ion of its production model, the Alia, is underway.

The debate around EVTOLS is different. Delta Air Lines, in partnershi­p with Joby, plans to offer a “premium Home to Seat” service to connect heliports with nearby major airports once certified by the Federal Aviation Administra­tion.

The companies estimate that about 1,000 people a day would choose EVTOLS instead of automobile­s to travel to and from the airport. This number is equivalent to just two per cent of the roughly 18.2 million travellers the airline managed at New York’s John F. Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport during the year ending in November, based on the latest U.S. Bureau of Transporta­tion Statistics data.

“Moving around people with more means to access mobility and, in some cases, bypass congestion raises equity concerns,” said Adam Cohen, a senior researcher looking at transporta­tion issues at the University of California at Berkeley.

The first commercial EVTOL flights could be in operation this summer at the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris. Certificat­ion delays, however, might nix that dream. And, maybe as soon as 2025, Joby and Delta hope to launch flights in New York and Los Angeles; United and Archer Aviation plan to do the same in Chicago.

Hydrogen, depending how it is sourced and produced, can be completely free of carbon emissions. It also weighs less than most electric batteries, allowing the plane to store more energy for longer flights. The downside for using liquid hydrogen is space: The fuel requires more space to carry

the amount needed to power most commercial aircraft, which means less space for paying passengers.

“Hydrogen has always been the Holy Grail of aviation fuels,” said Paul Eremenko, co-founder and CEO of Universal Hydrogen.

Hydrogen is the lightest element and can power a fuel cell that generates electricit­y. The company, which is backed by American Airlines, Jetblue Ventures and others, is developing a hydrogen fuel-cell system that could be retrofitte­d on existing prop planes.

Universal Hydrogen began testing its fuel cells on a 40-seat plane last year in Moses Lake, Wash. Flight tests have since moved to Mojave, Calif., with an aim to earn certificat­ion in 2026.

European aerospace giant Airbus is considerin­g hydrogen fuel as well for its planes. In 2020, Airbus engineers began developing a hydrogen-powered aircraft known as ZEROE with a plan to be operationa­l by the middle of the 2030s. The initial concepts include four types of planes: two small planes with fewer than 100 seats and two larger aircraft with more than 200 seats.

Air New Zealand is betting on all of the new technologi­es, from electric to hydrogen, for its future fleet. The airline wants to begin flying a low-emission plane on domestic routes around 2030. It will begin testing a cargo plane within two years. The company is partnering with Heart Aerospace and Universal Hydrogen, among others.

“We need to do what we can to support all the technology because we’re going to need it all,” said Kiri Hannifin, chief sustainabi­lity officer of Air New Zealand. “Next-generation aircraft will be part of the soul for aviation.”

 ?? HEART AEROSPACE ?? A rendering of Heart Aerospace’s new 30-seat electric turboprop plane, the ES-30. Many airlines and aviation companies are experiment­ing with new technologi­es.
HEART AEROSPACE A rendering of Heart Aerospace’s new 30-seat electric turboprop plane, the ES-30. Many airlines and aviation companies are experiment­ing with new technologi­es.
 ?? UNIVERSAL HYDROGEN ?? Universal Hydrogen’s plane does test flights over the Mojave Desert aiming to earn certificat­ion in 2026.
UNIVERSAL HYDROGEN Universal Hydrogen’s plane does test flights over the Mojave Desert aiming to earn certificat­ion in 2026.
 ?? BRIAN JENKINS / BETA TECHNOLOGI­ES ?? Beta Technologi­es first flew an electric test plane in 2017.
Its Alia aircraft will be its first production model.
BRIAN JENKINS / BETA TECHNOLOGI­ES Beta Technologi­es first flew an electric test plane in 2017. Its Alia aircraft will be its first production model.

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