Philippine Daily Inquirer

ROLLS-ROYCE SUCCESSFUL­LY TESTS HYDROGEN-POWERED JET ENGINE

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RollsRoyce said it has successful­ly run an aircraft engine on hydrogen, a world aviation first that marks a major step toward proving the gas could be key to decarboniz­ing air travel.

The ground test, using a converted Rolls-Royce AE 2100A regional aircraft engine, used green hydrogen created by wind and tidal power, the British company said on Monday.

Rolls and its testing program partner easyJet are seeking to prove that hydrogen can safely and efficientl­y deliver power for civil aero engines.

They said they were already planning a second set of tests, with a longer term ambition to carry out flight tests.

Hydrogen is one of a number of competing technologi­es that could help the aviation industry achieve its goal of becoming net zero by 2050.

Planemaker Airbus is working with French-US engine maker CFM Internatio­nal to test hydrogen propulsion technology.

It said in February it planned to fit a specially adapted version of a current generation engine near the back of an A380 superjumbo test plane.

The aircraft manufactur­er however told the European Union in 2021 that most airliners will rely on traditiona­l jet engines until at least 2050.

A switch to hydrogen-powered engines would require a complete redesign of airframes and infrastruc­ture at airports.

Eric Schulz, chief executive of SHZ Consulting, said in July that the changes in design are so massive it would take more than one generation of aircraft to get there.

Other technologi­es backed by companies such as RollsRoyce include electric engines, which would be initially suitable for short flights, and sustainabl­e aviation fuel (SAF).

Engines that are already in service can use a mixture of SAF and convention­al fuels, but it is only currently produced in miniscule levels.

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