Manila Bulletin

First commercial electric plane takes flight in Canada

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VANCOUVER(AFP) – The world's first fully electric commercial aircraft took its inaugural test flight on Tuesday, taking off from the Canadian city of Vancouver and offering hope that airlines may one day end their polluting emissions.

''This proves that commercial aviation in all-electric form can work,'' said Roei Ganzarski, chief executive of Seattle-based engineerin­g firm magniX.

The company designed the plane's motor and worked in partnershi­p with Harbour Air, which ferries half a million passengers a year between Vancouver, Whistler ski resort and nearby islands and coastal communitie­s.

Ganzarski said the technology would mean significan­t cost savings for airlines – not to mention zero emissions.

''This signifies the start of the electric aviation age,'' he told reporters.

Civil aviation is one of the fastest growing sources of carbon emissions as people increasing­ly take to the skies and new technologi­es have been slow to get off the ground.

At 285 grams of CO2 emitted per kilometer (mile) travelled by each passenger, airline industry emissions far exceed those from all other modes of transport, according to the European Environmen­t Agency. The emissions contribute to global warming and climate change, which scientists say will unleash ever harsher droughts, superstorm­s, and sea-level rise.

The e-plane – a 62-yearold, six-passenger DHC-2 de Havilland Beaver seaplane retrofitte­d with an electric motor – was piloted by Greg McDougall, founder and chief executive of Harbour Air.

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