Airbus, easyJet and Rolls-Royce have joined forces to try to position Britain at the forefront of hydrogen-powered aviation as the industry plots its course to decarbonisation.
The partners launched the Hydrogen in Aviation (HIA) alliance on Tuesday to ensure that infrastructure, policy, regulatory and safety frameworks are ready for when the first hydrogen-powered aircraft takes to the skies.
Airbus plans to introduce a hydrogen-powered commercial aircraft by 2035, and Lundgren said he hoped easyJet would be the first customer.
Hydrogen flight is one of several competing technologies being explored as aviation faces a daunting task of reaching net-zero emission targets by 2050.
But the fuel’s challenges include securing a ready supply produced from renewable energy, redesigning aircraft for large and heavy tanks, and new infrastructure at airports.
The HIA partners, who include British parts-maker GKN Aerospace and Denmark-based green energy company Orsted, said there was a huge amount of work to do to set up the relevant frameworks, and they needed to work with government plus aviation and safety regulators.
Before the end of 2023, the HIA said it will produce a report setting out the milestones that need to be met over the next 10 years to make hydrogen-flying a reality.
Tags: Airbus, Decarbonisation, easyJet, Rolls-Royce
Recent Posts
Reliance eyes to access to PSU oil companies’ ATF pipeline
Hanaria ship powered by hydrogen and biodiesel passes certification
IAEA head calls for a roadmap for nuclear energy
Methatug, a methanol-powered tug launched at Port of Antwerp-Bruges
HIF Global selects Johnson Matthey’s methanol technology
Govt to introduce hydrogen-based process for steel production
LR to support Shandong Marine Group’s green energy transition
Bureau Veritas assesses technical viability of carbon capture tech