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ZeroAvia and Fortum to build a network of hydrogen airport hubs in the Nordic region

ZeroAvia today announced that it has signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Nordic energy company Fortum to explore developing hydrogen production and refuelling infrastructure at airports in the region. The companies will work together with a view to building a network of zero-emission flight routes.

“As part of the collaboration,” said a ZeroAvia press release,” ZeroAvia and Fortum will investigate the potential development of on-the-ground hydrogen infrastructure at relevant airports with the aim of removing emissions from both flights and the wider airport ecosystem. On-airport hydrogen infrastructure can also support complementary traffic from heavy-duty transportation, materials handling equipment and other energy consuming systems. Any future decisions on possible investments will be made at a later stage.

“Fortum is a Nordic energy company that produces and delivers clean energy, working together with industries on their decarbonization as part of the transition to net zero societies. Fortum’s core operations in the Nordics comprise efficient, CO2-free power generation as well as reliable supply of energy to private and business customers. This positions Fortum strongly to deliver the capacity required for the production of green hydrogen, a crucial ingredient for tackling aviation’s climate change impact.

Arnab Chatterjee, VP Infrastructure, ZeroAvia, said: “As hydrogen hubs, airports can help reduce climate and air quality impacts of flight and a raft of other operations. Scaling the renewable energy capacity and reducing costs pose clear, but fully surmountable, challenges to hydrogen as the fuel to power truly clean flights. Fortum is well positioned as a partner in this space, given the company’s clean energy focus and its emerging hydrogen leadership.”

ZeroAvia reports it has already demonstrated its world-first Hydrogen Airport Refueling Ecosystem (HARE) at its R&D hub in Kemble in the UK, and is working with a range of airports on projects to establish the infrastructure and operations to operate zero-emission routes as early as 2025.

For more information

ZeroAvia and Fortum Explore Hydrogen Airport Refueling Infrastructure Across the Nordics

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