World’s largest all-electric aircraft set for
first flight
Nine-seater plane should take to skies on Thursday and
produce no carbon emissions
Damian
Carrington Environment editor
@dpcarrington
Published
onWed 27 May 2020 11.07 BST
The world’s
largest all-electric aircraft is about to take to the skies for the first time.
The Cessna
Caravan, retrofitted with an electric engine, is expected to fly for 20-30
minutes over Washington state in the US on Thursday.
The plane
can carry nine passengers but a test pilot will undertake the inaugural flight
alone, cruising at a speed of 114mph (183km/h). The engine maker, magniX, hopes
the aircraft could enter commercial service by the end of 2021 and have a range
of 100 miles.
Before the
coronavirus pandemic, aviation was one of the fastest growing sources of the
carbon emissions that are driving the climate emergency. Scores of companies
are working on electric planes, although major breakthroughs in reducing the
weight of batteries will be needed before large planes can fly significant
distances on electric power alone. Other power sources being tested include
hydrogen fuel cells and biofuels.
The
aviation industry is heavily regulated to ensure safety but magniX hopes that
by retrofitting an existing plane the certification process can be accelerated.
A smaller seaplane powered by a magniX engine completed a short flight in
December.
In June
2019, another company, Ampaire, flew an aircraft powered by a hybrid
electric-fossil fuel engine over California. Analysts at the investment bank
UBS said at the time that the aviation industry would move towards hybrid and
electric engines for routes less than 1,000 miles long much more quickly than
many thought.
Roei
Ganzarski, the CEO of magniX, said current aeroplanes were both expensive to
operate and very polluting. “Electric airplanes will be 40%-70% lower cost to
operate per flight hour,” he said. “That means operators will be able to fly
more planes into smaller airports, meaning a shorter and door-to-door
experience, with no harmful CO2 emissions.”
Ganzarski
said the company believed all flights of less than 1,000 miles would be
completely electric in 15 years’ time. But he said: “Battery [energy] density
is not where we would like to see it. While it is good for ultra-short flights
of 100 miles on a retrofit aircraft and over 500 miles on a new design aircraft
like the Alice, there is plenty of untapped potential in batteries. Now that
the first commercial aircraft has flown all-electric, battery companies are
starting to work more diligently on aerospace-ready battery solutions.”
Among the
other companies developing electric aircraft are Zunum Aero, which is building
a 27-seat plane with a 680-mile range, and the engine maker Rolls-Royce, whose
Accel programme aims to produce the fastest all-electric plane to date.
However, in April, Rolls-Royce and Airbus cancelled their plans for a hybrid electric
aircraft. The German company Lilium is working on a five-seater jet-powered
electric air taxi.
The Cessna
Caravan being used by magniX is one of the world’s most used medium-range
planes, with more than 2,600 operating in 100 countries. The first flight is
set for 8am Pacific time (1500 GMT) on Thursday, weather permitting.
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