Sustainable Commercial Air Transport Calls for a Holistic Approach

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Sustainable Commercial Air Transport Calls for a Holistic Approach

When the 2021 AGM of the International Air Transport Association (IATA) committed to a 2050 net zero target for carbon emissions, it was understandable to think of this mainly in terms of moving airliners from burning kerosene to using sustainable power sources.

While it is true that direct carbon emissions from airliner engines are by far the biggest contributor to air travel’s environmental impact, in reality, resetting commercial air transport for a carbon neutral age requires a much broader approach.

It’s an approach that needs to encompass not only the entire value chain, through manufacture, operations and maintenance, but the role and contribution of entirely new air transport sectors, Urban Air Mobility (UAM) being the most prominent currently.

Henkel is a global technology and material supplier with a vision for supporting the industry’s net-zero commitments through sustainable operations, innovation in materials, and greater collaboration throughout the supply chain. In this blog, we explore these critical foundations for a sustainable, carbon neutral commercial air transport sector, and look at Henkel’s role in creating them.

Sustainable Operations

Alternative propulsion solutions are core to delivering sustainable operations, whether through sustainable aviation fuel (SAF), hydrogen, fuel cell or battery technology.

While these technologies almost certainly hold the long-term answer for sustainable commercial flying, they are still maturing, leaving a gap to close for commercial air transport to meet its climate targets within the timescales.

Offsetting and carbon capture throughout the value chain can help close this gap, along with the use of new materials and manufacturing methods to reduce aircraft weight, increase efficiency, and lower the energy density bar for new propulsion technologies.

UAM offers a source of fresh thinking and alternative approaches to some of the sustainability challenges facing the established commercial aviation sector, in areas such as safety and propulsion.

All this points to the need for a holistic approach to sustainable operations, encompassing supply chain and materials innovation, carbon offsetting and capture, and learning lessons from the UAM experience.

Innovative Compliant Materials

The materials used in manufacturing aircraft, and the mechanisms for joining, protecting, replacing and reusing them, impact air transport sustainability in multiple ways.

As Airbus, Boeing and other manufacturers have found, maximizing the use of light and durable composite materials significantly reduces fuel consumption and makes alternative power sources with lower energy density more feasible.

Maintenance overheads for composites are lower, particularly when combined with innovative bonding and filling technologies.

The range of materials and options for joining them enables manufacturers to optimize airframes for minimum maintenance and maximum life.

While ease of debonding and re-bonding components to increase life is unlikely to be a significant benefit in aircraft structures because of safety considerations, its application in non-structural areas can still deliver efficiency and sustainability benefits, for example by simplifying cabin refits.

Surface treatments for aluminum components may not immediately spring to mind when considering sustainable air transport, yet they demonstrate how sustainability needs to run right through the supply chain. For example, by creating chromium-free treatments, Henkel is delivering greater sustainability and cost-efficiency around a material that is still a key component in most aircraft.

Collaboration throughout the Supply Chain

At the same 2021 IATA AGM where the 2050 target was set, Willie Walsh, IATA’s Director General, recognized the critical role collaboration needs to play in achieving net zero for air transport when he said

“The cost and effort of breaking our industry’s dependance on fossil fuels cannot fall on the backs of airlines alone,”

2050 is a shared target for the industry, so meeting it needs to be a shared endeavor across all stakeholders in the air transport value chain.

Wille Walsh highlighted the need for governments to foster an environment where the innovation needed to meet the target can flourish. This needs to be supported by collaboration across the commercial aviation value chain, from manufacturing to operation and maintenance.

Whether it’s innovation in aircraft materials delivering the weight reductions to enable new propulsion solutions, advances in battery technology for UAM delivering a foundation for short or mid-haul electric flight, or new solutions for aluminum treatment reducing the environmental impact of aircraft structural components, collaboration and shared innovation across the value chain is key.

How Henkel is Contributing to Achieving Net Zero Air Transport

Henkel’s role as a global provider of materials technology, with extensive experience and expertise in the aerospace sector, positions us to play a key part in the cross-value chain collaboration that will deliver the 2050 net-zero target for air transport.

About the Author

Patric Scheidner

Corporate Vice President Global Head of Aviation, Space, Rail

Patric has been serving the chemical industry for more than 25 years.
He has mainly supported customers in Heavy Industries across four continents. His focus has been to develop customer-centric organizations and processes following continuous improvement methods, such as Lean Six Sigma. Being experienced in Supply Chain / Operations as much as Sales he fostered a culture of increasing customer value through the optimized combination of chemistry, process improvements, equipment as well as digital interfaces.

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