Norway’s plan for a fleet of electric planes

Avinor, the public operator of Norwegian airports, “aims to be the first in the world” to make the switch to electric air transport, chief executive Dag Falk-Petersen said. “We think that all flights lasting up to 1.5 hours can be flown by aircraft that are entirely electric,” he said, noting that would cover all domestic flights and those to neighbouring Scandinavian capitals. In the near future, Avinor plans to launch a tender offer to test a commercial route flown with a small electric plane with 19 seats, starting in 2025. By market share, it has more electric cars on the road than any other country in the world – electric and hybrid vehicles represented more than half of new car registrations in 2017 – and also has several projects underway for electric vessels.

Zunum Aero (Boeing) initially has plans for a 12-seat short-haul airliner they intend to fly by 2022, and a 50-seater aircraft with a range of 1,000 miles by 2027. And their plans don’t end there. “A 100-seat, 1500-mile aircraft we think will be viable by the late 2020s,” says Kumar. “We can get to what Norway wants to do.” Already, Airbus is looking at an electric aircraft that can carry 100 passengers 1,000km by 2030. Norway’s plan, if it goes ahead, will be felt outside its borders. If all flights lasting fewer than 90 minutes are flown with electric planes, that will mean those planes are landing in other cities in Scandinavia, and beyond. Aircraft makers will have to sell these aircraft to more countries than just Norway to make them viable. 

One solution may be to reduce the overall size of the planes being used for short-haul flights. At the moment most aircraft are built “largely for medium to long-haul flights. They’re designed for flights as long as 4,000 miles but 80% of them are under 1,500 miles. These are medium-to-long-haul aircraft but they’re flying short-haul.” Kumar says the time has come to stop using these larger, heavier, more expensive aircraft on such short routes.

Using all-electric planes will have benefits beyond emissions – the smaller aircraft will need smaller runways, which means they can use smaller airports. They will be quieter too, which means that they can be used earlier in the morning and later at night. And if the weight of batteries can be reduced the planes are likely to be lighter, meaning they will require less power.That final factor may mean lower running costs and therefore cheaper tickets – and cheaper tickets are a powerful incentive for change within the aviation industry (as the rise of low-cost airlines has proven).

BBC, Aug 14, 2018

A few years ago, Norway’s aviation chiefs had a sceptical view of all-electric aviation.

“Then about three years ago our board of directors went down to Airbus, in Toulouse,” says Falk-Peterson. “Airbus told us they had been doing a lot of work in this area already. And Boeing, through [aircraft maker] Zunum Aero and also with NASA. That’s why we decided to have a programme to electrify the flights in Norway.”

Norway is a good place for such experiments. Much of the country’s terrain is mountainous and there are many offshore islands, which means there are a lot of short-haul flights (Avinor runs no fewer than 46 airports in Norway). Road, rail or boat travel often take a lot longer than a short flight, especially during the winter when snow and ice can block roads and tracks.

Norway wants aircraft makers to come up with a 25-to-30-seat airliner, powered by electric motors

“A lot of the flights here are only 15 to 30 minutes,” says Falk-Peterson, “and we have all sorts of mountainous terrain. That’s why we decided to set up a programme where we can actually have aircraft makers tender for it in one or two years.”

Norway wants those aircraft makers to come up with a 25-to-30-seat airliner powered by electric motors, with the first of them introduced into service as early as 2025.

“We are sure that an aircraft like that can be electrified,” says Falk-Peterson.

Electric-powered aircraft are enjoying a boom at the moment; last year, the consulting firm Roland Berger found there were more than 100 electric-powered aircraft projects underway around the world.

Jet airliners at Rogaland Airport (Credit: Alamy)

Zunum Aero’s Ashish Kumar says short-haul routes are currently using planes designed for much longer distances (Credit: Alamy)

Slovenia’s Pipistrel is only one of them. Spokesman Taja Boscarol says the company are now making “several four-seaters, the most notable probably being the Taurus G4, the first fully electric four-seat aircraft in the world.

“Since then we developed some other four-seat prototypes with alternative means of propulsion, such as a hydrogen-powered four-seat aircraft. We have also developed a hybrid engine for a four-seat aircraft. The engine is fully functional, and the aircraft will take off in 2019, according to plan.”

Pipistrel says they see training aircraft – two and four-seaters like the ones they currently build – as the bulk of the electric plane market for the near future, but they also intend to build a 19-passenger “hybrid fuel cell commuter aircraft” by 2025.

Pipistrel will have some competition. Zunum Aero, based in Kirkland, a suburb of Seattle, is another company planning to produce the kind of aircraft Norway wants to see on its short-haul routes.

We’ve looked at what the others are doing in the industry, and we’ve learned from them – Ashish Kumar, Zunum Aero

Founded in 2013, Zunum Aero has received investment from airliner giant Boeing, and has been working on a range of ever-bigger and heavier aircraft.

Its CEO Ashish Kumar says the company was instantly intrigued by Norway’s plans, which came as part of a wider programme to try and cut emissions from transport.

“We’ve been in this space for five years now,” Kumar says. “We’ve looked at what the others are doing in the industry, and we’ve learned from them.”

Zunum Aero initially has plans for a 12-seat short-haul airliner they intend to fly by 2022, and a 50-seater aircraft with a range of 1,000 miles by 2027. And their plans don’t end there. “A 100-seat, 1500-mile aircraft we think will be viable by the late 2020s,” says Kumar. “We can get to what Norway wants to do.”

Three Zunum Aero concepts (Credit: Zunum Aero)

Zunum Aero plans a range of aircraft, including a 100-seat airliner by around 2020 (Credit: Zunum Aero)

The ambition is all the more interesting given the challenges that continue to face electric-powered airliners. Aircraft carrying dozens of passengers – and their luggage – require an enormous amount of energy to get in the air and stay aloft. Today’s airliners are lighter and more fuel economical than any generation before them, but no fuel apart from kerosene currently has an energy density – the amount of energy it is able to store – high enough for airliner use.

Batteries can obviously store electricity, but it was previously thought that so many would be needed to power a small airliner that the weight would be prohibitive. Kumar, however, says “batteries are in some ways the least of the problems”.

He says the biggest challenges are around the rest of the electronic systems. Can batteries reliably and safely maintain power so that flight-critical systems have power at all times? And how do you deal with the heat generated by all those batteries?

One solution may be to reduce the overall size of the planes being used for short-haul flights. At the moment most aircraft are built “largely for medium to long-haul flights. They’re designed for flights as long as 4,000 miles but 80% of them are under 1,500 miles. These are medium-to-long-haul aircraft but they’re flying short-haul.” Kumar says the time has come to stop using these larger, heavier, more expensive aircraft on such short routes.

All-electric planes will have benefits beyond emissions – they will need smaller runways, which means they can use smaller airports

“For shorter distances, you design a different aircraft.” Kumar says.

Both Zunum Aero and Avinor say that using all-electric planes will have benefits beyond emissions – the smaller aircraft will need smaller runways, which means they can use smaller airports. They will be quieter too, which means that they can be used earlier in the morning and later at night. And if the weight of batteries can be reduced the planes are likely to be lighter, meaning they will require less power. That final factor may mean lower running costs and therefore cheaper tickets – and cheaper tickets are a powerful incentive for change within the aviation industry (as the rise of low-cost airlines has proven).

Pipistrel electric aircraft (Credit: Alamy)

Slovenia’s Pipistrel has built a range of electric-powered light aircraft (Credit: Alamy)

Kumar says current aircraft are already generating an enormous amount of energy to power their onboard systems – for instance the Boeing 787 Dreamliner can generate as much as 1.3MW, which is enough electricity to power about 850 houses. “You don’t have to match the energy density of kerosene,” he says, “but you do have to make it work.” The big challenge, he says, will be trying to raise that power generation to around 5MW – the power that might be needed for a plane carrying 100 passengers, for instance.

Falk-Peterson says it’s likely that at least the first generation of Norway’s greener planes will use hybrid technology. Under aviation safety laws, aircraft have to carry enough reserve fuel to ensure they can divert to an alternative airport in case of problems. It is the kind of system – think of the Toyota Prius hybrid, now a stalwart of app-taxi services like Uber – that kickstarted the electric car. Batteries could be charged and stored until needed, and swapped with the spent batteries which are then charged and used on a different aircraft.

Already, Airbus is looking at an electric aircraft that can carry 100 passengers 1,000km by 2030.

Norway’s plan, if it goes ahead, will be felt outside its borders. If all flights lasting fewer than 90 minutes are flown with electric planes, that will mean those planes are landing in other cities in Scandinavia, and beyond. Aircraft makers will have to sell these aircraft to more countries than just Norway to make them viable. 

“Already, Airbus is looking at an electric aircraft that can carry 100 passengers 1,000km by 2030, says Falk-Peterson.

Infrastructure will be one of the biggest challenges. Norway is a rich country blessed with good transport links, but even in a country this well-developed, transporting kerosene is complicated and expensive. Norway will have to work out if the charging stations its new aircraft will need will be hooked to the grid, or whether they will use alternative means to generate the electricity.

Electric car being charged (Credit: Alamy)

Could airliner charging become as common as electric car charging? (Credit: Alamy)

In the meantime, Norway’s first steps to an all-electric short-haul fleet are happening.

Falk-Peterson’s flight for the press was not a one-off. The trained pilot took part in another demonstration last week. “It was a 15-20-minute flight, and I did 12 of them on the day. And we didn’t have to wait around for charging even once. We’d taken off fully charged, after a 20-minute flight we’d return, and we’d have used 25% of our battery.

“We’d park the plane, a technician would start charging it, and we’d go off and do the debrief and then brief for the next flight, head back to the aircraft and you’re recharged like you were for the start of the previous flight. We think the technology is already here.”

The Guardian, Jan 2018

Norway aims for all short-haul flights to be 100% electric by 2040

It already has more electric cars than any other country in the world and also has shipping projects underway, Agence France-Presse, 17 Jan 2018

A Norwegian Airlines Boeing 737. The country’s short-haul airliners are set to be entirely electric by 2040.
 A Norwegian Airlines Boeing 737. The country’s short-haul airliners are set to be entirely electric by 2040. Photograph: Alamy

All of Norway’s short-haul airliners should be entirely electric by 2040, the country’s airport operator said on Wednesday, cementing the Nordic nation’s role as a pioneer in the field of electric transport.

Avinor, the public operator of Norwegian airports, “aims to be the first in the world” to make the switch to electric air transport, chief executive Dag Falk-Petersen said. “We think that all flights lasting up to 1.5 hours can be flown by aircraft that are entirely electric,” he said, noting that would cover all domestic flights and those to neighbouring Scandinavian capitals.

EasyJet says it could be flying electric planes within a decade

Avinor, the public operator of Norwegian airports, “aims to be the first in the world” to make the switch to electric air transport, chief executive Dag Falk-Petersen said. “We think that all flights lasting up to 1.5 hours can be flown by aircraft that are entirely electric,” he said, noting that would cover all domestic flights and those to neighbouring Scandinavian capitals. In the near future, Avinor plans to launch a tender offer to test a commercial route flown with a small electric plane with 19 seats, starting in 2025. By market share, it has more electric cars on the road than any other country in the world – electric and hybrid vehicles represented more than half of new car registrations in 2017 – and also has several projects underway for electric vessels.

Norway, the largest oil and gas producer in western Europe, is paradoxically a leader in the field of electric transport.By market share, it has more electric cars on the road than any other country in the world – electric and hybrid vehicles represented more than half of new car registrations in 2017 – and also has several projects underway for electric vessels.

“When we will have reached our goal, air travel will no longer be a problem for the climate, it will be a solution,” Falk-Petersen said.

According to official statistics, air transport accounts for 2.4% of Norwegian greenhouse gas emissions for domestic traffic, and more than double that when international routes are included.

Electric air travel will also at least halve noise levels and the operating cost of aircraft, Falk-Petersen said.

But before reaching that point, Avinor said it would need to use intermediary technologies, such as biofuels and hybrid fuel-electric solutions.

Boeing and Airbus are currently exploring the viability of electric aircraft.

After abandoning a project for 100% electric planes last year, Airbus decided to refocus its efforts on developing a hybrid model, signing a partnership with British engine maker Rolls Royce and German industrial group Siemens. The first flight is planned for 2020.

Zunum Aero, a start-up partly financed by US aeronautics group Boeing, plans to bring a hybrid plane to the market by 2022.

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