lughnasadh t1_j0lmp3y wrote
Airbus's plans for their hydrogen powered A380 jumbo jet seem more like the future of aviation.
drondendorho t1_j0mu6iw wrote
The hydrogen production that would be required to fully replace carbon fuels in aviation is monumental: the near future of aviation is either degrowth, or climate change denial with a bit of hydrogen on top. I'm afraid we are heading for the second option.
Adler4290 t1_j0n4klq wrote
> the near future of aviation is either degrowth
This is my worst nightmare as a traveler. It would mean traveling would be rich people only and us 99.9% normies would pick one country to go every decade and just watch the rest on YT like during Covid.
drondendorho t1_j0n8zif wrote
This can either be regulated by the prices (only the rich can afford) or by the quantities (everyone is allowed a limited amount of travels in their life). I wish for the latter, but wouldn't bet much on it; having either would already be a big step. As for travelling, this could be the occasion of a big revisiting of what doing tourism means: it would still be possible to change continent once in a while, just not for the weekend. Trains can get your pretty far in Eurasia. Boats also need a fuel revolution but will hopefully get there.
tofubeanz420 t1_j0n23al wrote
Not to mention airport infrastructure is not setup for hydrogen fuel. Not saying they couldn't do it but it would probably cost a lot of money.
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