(29 April 2022, 12:14 +07)
One of Europe’s leading low cost airlines,
easyJet, has partnered with GKN Aerospace to collaborate on the
development of zero
carbon emission technologies for the airline industry.
The British carrier will support the development of GKN
Aerospace’s Hydrogen Combustion (H2JET) and Hydrogen Fuel Cell
(H2GEAR) technology, including exploring options for flight
demonstration, as part of the airline’s ambition to de-carbonise
aviation. easyJet will also provide insights into operational
requirements and economics.
H2GEAR is a GKN Aerospace-led
collaboration programme aiming to develop a liquid hydrogen
propulsion system for sub-regional aircraft that could be scaled
up to larger aircraft.
H2GEAR is developing a liquid hydrogen propulsion system for sub-regional aircraft
The technology converts liquid hydrogen into
electricity within a fuel cell system, which then powers the aircraft, eliminating carbon emissions and
creating a new generation of clean air travel.
The H2GEAR programme is supported by £27M of ATI
funding, matched by GKN Aerospace and its industrial partners.
H2JET is a Swedish collaborative two-year
programme led by GKN Aerospace to push development of key
subsystems for gas turbine-based hydrogen propulsion of medium
range civil aircraft.
Max Brown, VP Technology, GKN Aerospace, said, “At
GKN Aerospace sustainability is at the heart of our business.
Hydrogen-powered aircraft offer a clear route to keep the world
connected, with dramatically cleaner skies. The UK is at the
forefront of this technology. We look forward to working with easyJet
and our partners, to develop and industrialise the breakthrough
technology to fly aircraft with zero CO2 emissions.”
In addition to GKN Aerospace, easyJet is
working with Airbus, Rolls-Royce, Cranfield Aerospace Solutions and Wright Electric, to accelerate
the development of zero carbon emission technologies and
supporting infrastructure.
The airline is optimistic that it could
begin flying customers on planes powered by hydrogen-combustion,
hydrogen-electric or a hybrid of both by the mid to late-2030s.
David Morgan, Director of Flight Operations,
easyJet, said, “At easyJet, we are committed to working towards a
future with zero carbon emission flying. We know that technology
is a key driver to achieve our decarbonisation targets, with
hydrogen propulsion a frontrunner for short-haul airlines like
easyJet. Cross-industry partnerships are key to developing these
promising new technologies and we look forward to collaborating
with GKN Aerospace to support bringing this technology to maturity
as early as possible.”
In November last year, easyJet joined Race to
Zero, a global UN-backed campaign to achieve net-zero carbon
emissions by 2050 at the latest. In joining Race to Zero, the
airline committed to setting an interim science-based target for
2035 and to reaching net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.
In 2019, easyJet became one of the first major airlines
worldwide to offset the carbon emissions from the fuel used for
all its flights and remains the only major airline in Europe to do
so. This comes at no additional cost to its customers and the
airline only supports projects that are certified by either Gold
Standard or Verified Carbon Standard.
Beyond carbon, easyJet is focusing on reducing
plastic – more than 36 million single-use plastic items were
eliminated – as well as reducing waste within its wider operations
and the supply chain.
The airline also introduced new crew
uniforms made from recycled plastic bottles. With 45 bottles in
each uniform this has the potential to prevent 2.7 million plastic
bottles from ending up in landfill or in oceans over the next five
years.
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