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9 votes
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London saw a surprising benefit to fining high-polluting cars: More active kids
28 votes -
Sweden has announced controversial plans to scrap its tax on airline tickets from 2025
6 votes -
In the quest for electric planes, hybrid may be the answer
8 votes -
Looking for alternatives to flying, Matilda Welin decided to embark on a long-distance cycle from London to Sweden. Here's what she learned.
6 votes -
Report reveals how workers got sick while cleaning up East Palestine derailment site
14 votes -
The meaning of construction costs per rider
5 votes -
East Palestine Ohio after the derailment- reports of hair loss, seizures, residents to decide whether to accept negotiated settlement
42 votes -
New York Governor Kathy Hochul’s decision to suspend congestion pricing is absurd
33 votes -
Joe Biden Environmental Protection Agency issues $900 million to US schools for clean-energy buses
21 votes -
European Commission approves creation of an environmental zone in the city centre of Stockholm, where petrol and diesel cars will be banned entirely from 2025
25 votes -
All the ways car dependency is wrecking us – car harm: a global review of automobility's harm to people and the environment
15 votes -
Norway is well on the way to achieving its target of 100% new electric vehicle registrations by 2025 – the situation is different for vans
18 votes -
The world’s largest cruise ship is a climate liability
31 votes -
Joe Biden administration announces $1 billion for low-emission US school buses
39 votes -
The humble American trash truck is ready for an all-electric upgrade
9 votes -
Air travel is profoundly bad for the environment but one of the hardest industries to decarbonize. Can green technologies make a difference before it’s too late?
https://www.noemamag.com/the-seductive-vision-of-green-aviation/ Picture yourself in an airship pushing into the northern latitudes. From the vantage of a barstool in the center of a luxurious...
https://www.noemamag.com/the-seductive-vision-of-green-aviation/
Picture yourself in an airship pushing into the northern latitudes. From the vantage of a barstool in the center of a luxurious lounge, you look through panoramic windows to see an Arctic vista scroll past. The ride is as smooth as a cruise liner cutting through a mirror sea. Above you is a white canopy, the base of the great bladder of gas keeping you airborne. Down below, a huge oval shadow glides across the pack ice.
I disembarked from this flight of fancy and came back to reality in an industrial estate on the outskirts of the town of Bedford, a couple hours north of London. For now, the airship of my imagination sat disassembled in front of me — an engine, the top section of a tail fin, a salubrious sample cabin.
Hybrid Air Vehicles calls it the Airlander: a colossal, state-of-the-art dirigible that was originally conceived as a military surveillance platform for the U.S. Air Force. That idea was scrapped as America de-escalated its operations in Afghanistan, but by then a new application for airships was emerging. Aviation is the most energy-intensive form of transport, and in recent years the industry has come under intense scrutiny for its environmental footprint. Unlike a passenger airplane, a passenger airship — buoyant and slow — doesn’t have to burn much fuel to stay in the air.
“We’ve completely normalized flying in an aluminum tube at 500 miles an hour, but I think we’ve got some big changes coming,” said Tom Grundy, an aerospace engineer and HAV’s CEO, who was showing me around the research facility.
Many of the scientific principles behind Grundy’s airship are a throwback to a bygone age, when Goodyears and Zeppelins carried affluent clientele around America and Europe and occasionally between the two. Other aspects are cutting-edge. The cambered twin hulls will be inflated with 1.2 million cubic feet of inert helium, not flammable hydrogen like most of the Airlander’s interwar forebears. The skin, a composite of tenacious, space-age materials, is barely a tenth of an inch thick but so strong that there is no need for any internal skeleton. Grundy handed me a handkerchief-sized off-cut. “You could probably hang an SUV off that,” he said. When it goes into production later this year, it will be the world’s largest commercial airliner: around 300 feet long, nearly the length of a soccer field.
But arguably its key selling point — the reason HAV resuscitated a mode of aerial transport once thought to have gone down in flames with the Hindenburg — is that it’s green. Even powered by today’s kerosene-based jet fuel, the total emissions per kilometer from its four vectored engines will be 75% less than a conventional narrow-bodied jet covering the same distance. The Airlander of course is much slower. A maximum velocity of under 100mph means that it’s never going to compete directly with jet airliners. “We tend to think of it as sitting between the air and ground markets — a railway carriage for the skies,” Grundy told me.
“When it enters service, perhaps as soon as 2026, the Airlander will offer premium, multi-day cruises to hard-to-reach places like the Arctic Circle.”
A 100-seat cabin designed for regional travel has already attracted orders from carriers in Spain and Scotland. The prototype we were sitting in, with a futuristic carbon-fiber profile and wine glasses dangling above a wraparound bar, is the central section of another configuration called the “expedition payload module.” When it enters service, perhaps as soon as 2026, it will offer premium, multi-day cruises to hard-to-reach places like the Arctic Circle. Behind the communal lounge, a central corridor will lead to eight double ensuite bedrooms. “You’ll even be able to open the windows,” Grundy said.
35 votes -
Denmark launches the Laura Maersk, the first container ship to run entirely on green methanol – will save 2.75 million tonnes of CO2 per year
21 votes -
California Department of Transportation awards $54 million for Sustainable Transportation Planning grants
7 votes -
London’s plan to charge drivers of polluting cars sparks protests and stirs political passions
29 votes -
The EPA’s ambitious plan to cut auto emissions receives pushback from US automakers
29 votes -
Electric vehicles are sending toxic tire particles into the water, soil, and air
19 votes -
Oil is hard to quit, even in Norway where electric cars rule the road
15 votes -
Can EV batteries be recycled? It’s complicated, but it’s already happening
8 votes -
There were more toxic chemicals on train that derailed in Ohio than originally reported, data shows
18 votes -
Would you fall for it? General Motors' propaganda video from the 1950s.
8 votes -
Why the concept of induced demand is a hard sell
6 votes -
Denmark's government has announced a goal to make domestic flights fossil fuel free by 2030
8 votes -
Electric vehicles won’t save us: Why EV’s are false prophets in the fight for a better world
10 votes -
Sweden to increase airport fees for high-polluting planes – climate impact, such as use of biofuels, to be taken into account when calculating charges
8 votes -
California Air Resources Board passes law banning the sale of heavy diesel trucks and vans completely by 2045
11 votes -
Would you give up flying to lower your environmental impact?
21 votes -
Sweden has said an offer of support for Scandinavian Airlines would be dependent on the airline agreeing to tougher emissions goals
3 votes -
Air France 'must cut domestic flights' in the name of fighting climate change to get state loan
16 votes -
Europe OKs suspension of strict ‘use-it or lose-it’ airline slot rules amid coronavirus outbreak
9 votes -
Airlines are burning thousands of gallons of fuel flying empty 'ghost' planes so they can keep their flight slots during the coronavirus outbreak
13 votes -
Controversial plans for a third runway at Heathrow Airport have been thrown into doubt after a court ruling
8 votes -
A ban on selling new petrol, diesel or hybrid cars in the UK will be brought forward from 2040 to 2035 at the latest, under government plans
9 votes -
Sweden has seen a 4% drop in the number of people flying via its airports, as flight-shaming takes off
13 votes -
Free-of-charge public transport isn't free, Finnish experts say
12 votes -
How ride-hail companies can help, not hurt, cities
3 votes -
Oslo wants to build the world's first zero-emissions port
6 votes -
Flygskam – No sign of Sweden's plane shame in Norway
6 votes -
Finnair has flown its first biofuel flights backed by its 'Push for Change' carbon cutting initiative this week
8 votes -
Flygskam – Is Sweden's no-fly movement just media hype?
7 votes -
Car boom brings gridlock misery to ‘green and happy’ Bhutan
3 votes -
Solar-powered barge gobbles up trash in Finland's waterways
5 votes -
New Zealand—one of three remaining developed countries without vehicle fuel emissions standards—proposes scheme to hike cost of gas guzzling vehicles in exchange for EV rebate
8 votes -
Fact checking Tesla's "impact report"
4 votes -
Hyperloop promises ultrafast transportation. But what does it mean for the environment?
10 votes