Qatar Tribune

Cop26: UK to trial hydrogen-fuelled zero emissions jet

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BRITISH engineers are set to begin trialling a green commercial passenger jet in a global first.

It comes as the aviation industry, which produces around 2 per cent of all human-induced carbon dioxide emissions, seeks solutions to decarbonis­e airlines. The Cop2 summit in Glasgow in November will also be pivotal for improving the sustainabi­lity of aviation.

Cranfield Aerospace Solutions (CAeS) is hoping to make zero-emissions flights commercial­ly available by 2025.

The company has purchased and taken delivery of a Britten-Norman Islander light aircraft from the Isles of Scilly Steamship Group, and will retrofit it with hydrogen fuel cell technology.

“We are excited to begin testing our hydrogen fuel cell power-train technology on a widely used commercial aircraft,” said Paul Hutton, chief executive of CAeS.

“It is critical that the aviation industry delivers real zero-emissions aircraft solutions to reduce its impact on the environmen­t.

“We are now rapidly progressin­g to delivering the first certified emissions-free passenger carrying aircraft services anywhere in the world.”

CAeS is leading the Project Fresson consortium. It is named after Scottish Highlands aviation pioneer Captain Ernest Edmund “Ted” Fresson, who establishe­d Highland Airways and introduced the first passenger air services between Inverness, Wick and Kirkwall in the 1930s.

The project will see convention­al engines removed and replaced with an electric motor and a hydrogen fuel cell.

“We are also installing hydrogen tanks for the gaseous hydrogen that feeds the fuel cells,” Jenny Kavanagh, chief strategy officer at CAeS, said.

She said the consortium is still seeking investment opportunit­ies to help further the project.

The arrival of the Islander in CAeS’s hangar marks a critical step towards the world’s first regulatory-certified, zeroemissi­ons, commercial passenger carrying aircraft.

It means the company can commence test flights on the existing engines to record their full performanc­e before it starts installing and testing the revolution­ary hydrogen systems.

CAeS aims for the first test flight to take place in 2023, and for the zero emissions product to be in the market by 2025.

The project, which has been supported by the UK government with a 10.3 million ( 14m) grant, is the first phase of the hydrogen project, with CAeS aiming to produce a commercial­ly-viable hydrogen 19-seat aircraft, followed by a 75-seat model.

Stuart Reid, chief executive of the Isles of Scilly Steamship Group, which sold the craft to the engineers, praised the initiative.

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