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ZeroAvia and Birmingham Airport partner to progress H2-powered air travel

ZeroAvia is the leader in zero-emission technologies including H2-electric-powered aircraft, such as those successfully test-flown at its base in Kemble, Gloucestershire, in January. H2-electric engines use H2 in fuel cells to generate electricity, which is then used to power electric motors to turn the aircraft’s propellers, with the only byproduct being water.

ZeroAvia is currently working on bringing to market a zero-emission system capable of flying 20-seat aircraft 300 nautical miles by 2025. This opens the possibility of green air travel from Birmingham to destinations like Glasgow, Aberdeen, Belfast and Dublin by the middle of this decade.

In a move that would make zero-emission travel to Mediterranean holiday destinations a reality, ZeroAvia is aiming to get an emissions-free 80-seat aircraft flying up to 1,000 nautical miles by 2027. 

For BHX, the partnership with ZeroAvia forms an important part of its journey to become a net-zero-carbon airport by 2033, as outlined in its carbon roadmap, published in 2022. The airport plans to use an area near to its disused Elmdon terminal building as a potential location for H2 refueling infrastructure, testing and operations.

Arnab Chatterjee, VP Infrastructure, ZeroAvia, said, “Birmingham Airport can be a central spoke in a green flight network in the UK, given that any domestic mainland destination will be reachable from the airport using our first systems in 2025. Given the commitments of the Jet Zero Strategy on domestic aviation, it is fantastic to engage with forward-thinking airports that want to be early innovators and developers to deliver the vision of bringing truly clean, quiet and pollution free flights to the UK.”

Simon Richards, Chief Finance & Sustainability Officer, Birmingham Airport, said, “We are thrilled to partner with ZeroAvia on creating solutions to the main challenge of our generation – protecting the future of our planet. We could, quite conceivably, see the first H2-powered domestic passenger flight taking off from BHX in the UK in a few years. That’s mind-blowing.”

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