A hybrid-electric propulsion system for regional aircraft is seen as a promising step towards achieving a more sustainable aviation industry. To address the challenge of climate change, the EU-funded AMBER project will seek to mature, integrate, and validate key technologies necessary for a megawatt-class hybrid-electric propulsion system powered by hydrogen fuel cells. This will significantly reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and fuel burn by at least 50% compared to 2020 state-of-the-art regional aircraft. AMBER recognises the importance of regional aviation in leading the way towards sustainability and achieving ambitious environmental goals. The project is a step towards decarbonising aviation and reducing pollutant emissions.
Climate change poses an unprecedented challenge on today’s society. Numerous studies highlight the urgent need to decarbonise global industry and drastically reduce pollutant emissions across all sectors, including aviation. Although the global environmental impact of aviation is mostly driven by small- and medium-range aircraft due to the large volume of operations, the development of disruptive technologies for the power demands that such applications require cannot be put in place until progressive maturation of novel enabling technologies has been achieved at lower scale or sizes. The transformation of regional aviation, i.e. aircraft serving distances of 500 to 1000 km at a capacity of up to 100 seats, will thus lead the way towards sustainability and be of particular importance. Both battery and liquid hydrogen-powered fuel cell technology will not be sufficiently matured to allow the realisation of a fully electric regional aircraft within the next decade. Instead, an intermediate step will be required to significantly reduce GHG emissions already by 2035. The development of a hybrid-electric propulsion system for regional aircraft with at least 50% hybridisation represents this very challenging, yet achievable intermediate step and can allow for a mission fuel burn reduction by at least 50% compared to 2020 state-of-the-art regional aircraft. A thermal engine that allows for usage of 100% sustainable aviation fuel will allow to reduce life-cycle GHG emissions by 90% and thus close to zero. The project AMBER (InnovAtive DeMonstrator for hyBrid-Electric Regional Application) addresses this aspect and pursues the maturation of hybrid-electric key components as well as the validation of a product-representative parallel hybrid-electric propulsion system architecture, fuel cell-based, for next-generation regional aircraft with entry into service by 2035 to meet the ambitious environmental goals set out in the Strategic Research and Innovation Agenda of the Clean Aviation Joint Undertaking.
GE AVIO SRL, Italy