B.C.’s Harbour Air aims to buy 50 electric engines to convert seaplane fleet

Descrease article font size Increase article font size B.C.'s Harbour Air[1] has unveiled plans to buy 50 new electric engines to electrify its seaplane fleet.

The company made history with the 2019 test flight of the world's first fully electric commercial aircraft and has conducted 78 subsequent test flights.

On Tuesday, it said it had signed a letter of intent with electric engine maker magniX to buy 50 magni650 electric engines. In a media release, it said the engine maker would support work to get the engines validated by Transport Canada and gain Canadian and U.S. certification to have the mani650s installed in DHC-2 Beaver seaplanes.

Click to play video: 'Canadian seaplane airline launches world's first commercial electric plane'

2:06 Canadian seaplane airline launches world's first commercial electric plane Trending Now

The companies are also looking to extend support to other aircraft models.

Story continues below advertisement Harbour Air said it is aiming to build a west coast sustainable aviation hub, including offering electric conversion services to third parties. The seaplane operator is aiming for a commercial certification of their first electric aircraft by 2026.

More on Money

(C) 2024 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

References

  1. ^ Harbour Air (globalnews.ca)
  2. ^ Canada's most wanted list: Toronto suspect in fatal shooting at No.

    1 (globalnews.ca)

  3. ^ Train goes up in flames while rolling through London, Ont.

    Here's what we know (globalnews.ca)