Business Standard

Airbus, Rolls-Royce, Siemens working on hybrid plane

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

Airbus, Siemens and Rolls-Royce are teaming up to develop a hybrid passenger plane that would use a single electric turbofan along with three convention­al jet engines running on aviation fuel.

The plane is an effort to develop and demonstrat­e technology that in the future could help limit emissions of carbon dioxide from aviation and reduce reliance on fossil fuels. The three companies today said they aim to build a flying version of the E-Fan X technology demonstrat­or plane by 2020.

The aircraft would be based on the existing BAe 146 four- engine regional jet.

The hybrid version would generate electric power through a turbine within the plane. That power would be used to turn the fan blades of the single electric turbofan engine. If the system works, a second electric motor could be added, the companies said.

The companies said plane maker Airbus would be responsibl­e for building the aircraft’s systems into a working whole, control systems and flight controls. Jet engine maker Rolls-Royce would make the generator and the turbo-shaft engine and engineerin­g company Siemens would deliver the twomegawat­t electric motor to power the engine.

The companies said they were looking ahead to the European Union’s long-term goals of reducing CO2 emissions from aviation by 60 per cent, as well as meeting noise and pollution limits that they said “cannot be achieved with technologi­es existing today.” CO2 “carbon dioxide” is a greenhouse gas that scientists say contribute­s to global warming.

Other projects for hybrid or electric planes are in the works. Kirkland, Washington-based Zunum Aero says it is working on a 12-seat hybrid-electric commuter jet. The company’s website lists its partners as Boeing, jetBlue Technology Ventures, and the Department of Commerce Clean Energy Fund.

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