UK-based bargain airline easyJet has thrown its weight behind the development of an electric taxiing system in a bid to cut its fuel consumption and enhance its environmental credibility. The "electric green taxiing system" (EGTS) is a joint venture by engineering and aerospace conglomerates Honeywell and Safran. Safran claims that four percent of easyJet's fuel consumption is used taxiing aircraft before take off and after landing from and to gates.
Four percent may not sound much, but it's a figure that's higher than the norm for budget airlines like easyJet which typically have a high turnover of short-haul flights and so spend a proportionately higher amount of time on the ground. easyJet's planes are thought to average 20 minutes of taxiing time per flight, amounting to 3.5 million ground-miles a year over its entire fleet.
With EGTS, some of the aircraft's main wheels are fitted with motors and actuators affording pilots complete control of the the plane when taxiing. The system is powered by an auxiliary generator. It sounds as though little to no airport infrastructure is required and that the bulk (if not all) of the technology is housed on the plane. It's hoped that EGTS will eliminate the need for tugs to bring aircraft safely in and out of stands.
As with any electric technology, EGTS will only be as green as the source of supply, though presumably the research team is confident that a switch to electric power will be environmentally beneficial regardless of source when compared to aircraft fuel.
The first operational trials are due to take place in 2013. Their purpose is to ascertain whether the estimated fuel saving of four percent is realistic. easyJet's involvement will help to establish operational procedures for airlines wishing to adopt EGTS. It is hoped that the system will start appearing in aircraft old and new alike in 2016.
This isn't the first occasion of easyJet talking a good game, environmentally. Previously the airline has announced plans to incorporate cutting edge research by airframe and engine manufacturers to produce lightweight airliners 25 percent quieter, which emit 50 percent less carbon dioxide and 75 percent less nitrous oxides. easyJet has said previously that it hopes these "ecoJets" will be in operation 2015.
And easyJet isn't the first member of the air industry to examine greener methods of taxiing. Last July we reported on joint research by Airbus and the German Aerospace Center into autonomous taxiing powered by fuel cell technology.
Source: Safran
Aircraft using their main Thrust engines for Taxying is about 99% inefficient.. Using the APU (already generating power for the plane or an upgraded APU) to electrically power the wheels for slow taxying is a huge leap in efficiency...
For short haul operators (lots of taxying realtive to the time in the air) there are gains to be made, also not having to be pushed out from a terminal will mean faster turn around times (will still need ground crew to guide the reversing part)...
For Long haul operations, carrying the extra weight for the whole trip may cut into any benefits.. who cares if 500kg of fuel are saved on the ground if 2000kg extra are burned in flight due to the weight of the system...
Same with using batteries for the power, using a Jet fuel powered efficient APU will be lighter and more cost effective than carrying batteries to be topped up with imaginative green power... more weight, means more fuel burnt, more whales extincted... Simpler lighter system, has some merit.. (of course a super capacitor for regen-braking on landing would be interesting, but to actually capture any significant part of the braking energy, would need a wheel generator as big as the thrust power-turbine... probably not doable, as then extra fuel burn carrying the load will negate any benefits...
They have not explored ground based take-off acceleration (catapult or cable tow), that has more possibility of reducing pollution, as it could use \"green\" power, and capture landing energy (using arrestor cables), allowing the aircraft to have a lighter takeoff weight, not needing the fuel for the initial acceleration from rest to Rotation speed..... fanciful, well so is wheel motors in airliners, not impossible.
In the same vein, aircraft on the ground could be powered from umbilicals from the airport terminal rather than using the aircraft APU.
re; yinfu99
No matter how energy dense the batteries get they don\'t get lighter as the energy is consumed. The cargo weight that an airplane can carry is the difference between the weight of the airplane and reserve fuel load, and the maximum total landing weight. So aside from the reserve fuel load every gram of fuel displaced by a battery is a gram of cargo that can not be carried. Many airliners burn greater weight of fuel per flight than the weight of the cargo. While solar might be equal in weight for axillary power the planes will also fly at night so the extra weight will require more fuel to move than the APU burns. Electrical storage will have to either get far more energy dense than jet fuel or a safe, practical broadcast power system will have to be created for electrically powered airliners to be feasible. ..........................................................................................................................
If you built wind turbans that could be raised and lowered at the ends of the runways so that you could power them by the jet exhaust as they wind up for takeoff you could harvest a great deal of predictable electricity from the wasted energy.
Trains wreck at a much higher rate than planes crash. You forgot to calculate the value of time lost to transit. A high subsonic altitude plane can take you half way around the world in less than a day. Ground effect vehicles AKA air cushion vehicles AKA hover craft like helicopters use power to simply stay aloft are less efficient than fixed wing aircraft. Also flying boats are known to burn half their fuel taking off. It is fare more efficient to fly a holding pattern for hours than to land and take off in a seaplane.