Bangkok Post

Ultra-fast jet: Study warns of impact on environmen­t

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Reviving supersonic passenger flights will harm the environmen­t as the jets will not likely be able to comply with existing fuel efficiency, pollution and noise standards for subsonic aircraft, according to a study released yesterday.

US-based startups Aerion Supersonic, Boom Supersonic and Spike Aerospace are all aiming to revive ultra-fast flights by the mid-2020s by modifying existing engines rather than spending billions of dollars to make a new one to serve a market that has been dormant since Concorde stopped flying in 2003.

“Modified engines will burn five-to-seven times more fuel per passenger than subsonic jets, exceed global limits for new subsonic jets by 40% for nitrogen oxide and 70% for carbon dioxide,’’ the Internatio­nal Council on Clean Transporta­tion (ICCT) said.

The ICCT said, based on its study, supersonic jet makers would be unlikely to meet environmen­tal standards unless they used a new engine design with technology like a variable cycle that would operate differentl­y at take-off than in cruise mode.

“The alternativ­e is for policymake­rs to ease standards for supersonic jets,’’ it added.

The United States is already pushing for different standards for ultra-fast planes but facing resistance from European nations that want tough rules on noise.

“There are reasons to be worried about the environmen­tal i mpact of reintroduc­ing supersonic aircraft,” said Daniel Rutherford, aviation director at the US-based independen­t non-profit research organisati­on.

“A modest first step is for manufactur­ers to commit to meeting existing standards for new aircraft,” added Rutherford, a coauthor of the ICCT study.

But finding an efficient engine for supersonic jets is tough in an industry that has for decades been catering to subsonic planes by improving fuel efficiency, expanding range and reducing noise through the use of larger fans.

Supersonic jets are most efficient at cruising altitude with smaller engines that are far noisier on take-off, like those on fighter jets or old 727s that do not meet modern airport noise standards. Smaller engines help reduce aerodynami­c drag when flying above mach speed — the speed of sound.

Lockheed Martin Corp-backed Aerion has selected a GE engine core used in F-16 fighter jets and Boeing 737s as the basis for the engine on its planned jet, which will have a top speed of Mach 1.4.

Boom and Spike, which plan top speeds

of Mach 2.2 and Mach 1.6 respective­ly, have yet to select engines.

“Even if you built something new, I think you are going to be struggling,” said Daniel Edgington-Mitchell, an aerospace engineerin­g l ecturer at Melbourne’s Monash University.

“I think that is why there is such a push in the US to reconsider the standards particular­ly for supersonic aircraft because it is just going to be really difficult.”

 ??  ?? A wind tunnel model of the Boom Supersonic XB-1 is displayed at the Boom Supersonic showroom during the Farnboroug­h Airshow on Monday.
A wind tunnel model of the Boom Supersonic XB-1 is displayed at the Boom Supersonic showroom during the Farnboroug­h Airshow on Monday.

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