What is a TaxiBot?

A light blue KLM jet with front wheel attached to a tow vehicle.

Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam plans to purchase two TaxiBots to move aircraft from the gate to the runway instead of using their own jet power, according to operator Royal Schiphol Group. It’s part of the airport’s effort to reduce pollution and make operations more sustainable.

Airports in Delhi and Bangalore, India, have conducted trials with a special aircraft tow vehicle. And Lufthansa tested a TaxiBot seven years ago. But Schiphol is the first airport in the world that wants to introduce sustainable taxiing on a large scale. 

The TaxiBot is a semi-robotic hybrid towing vehicle made by Smart Airport Systems under license from Israel Aircraft Industries for taxiing airplanes with their power off. The system is based on a vehicle that connects to the aircraft and is controlled by the pilot. The special towing vehicles can reduce fuel consumption and noxious emissions, including CO2, as much as 85% and reduce noise pollution by 60%, according to the company. And it improves efficiency by reducing wasted time at the gate during engine start-up, speeding up aircraft turn times.

A previous trial at Schiphol showed that sustainable taxiing leads to 50% less fuel consumption during taxiing, in the process lowering CO2, nitrogen and ultrafine particle emissions. Given the distance involved, these fuel savings can reach up to 65% percent when aircraft taxi to Schiphol’s runway, the airport operator said.

Autonomous towing vehicles are one way airports and airlines are trying to reduce the environmental impact of ground operations. Others include autonomous baggage carts and busses.

Schiphol Airport, along with Air Traffic Control the Netherlands; carriers KLM, Transavia and Corendon Dutch Airlines and ground handling companies dnata and KLM Ground Services, have drawn up a step-by-step plan to make sustainable taxiing standard procedure at Schiphol by 2030. The plan fits with a broader European initiative aimed at developing and demonstrating more sustainable flight operations from gate to gate, applying multiple strategies and solutions to save fuel for each stage of a flight.

The first step of the plan is deploying the two TaxiBots in a follow-up pilot program by mid-year. If the pilot phase is successful it will become the standard way of operating and the number of aircraft that will taxi to and from the runway with a tow will gradually increase. Officials anticipate 18% of all flights will taxi sustainably after four years, with the practice spreading to more runways by 2025.

Royal Schiphol Group, the airport’s operator, recently said it is making infrastructure modifications to support sustainable taxiing to, and from, the runway. The project includes markings on the asphalt to ensure aircraft stop in the correct place and can be disconnected from the tow vehicle. Roads also need to be widened to enable the special vehicles to drive back and forth after an aircraft has been released without disrupting other aircraft traffic.

Meanwhile, Smart Airport Systems is developing a zero-emission vehicle, with electric or hydrogen fuel.

Click here for more FreightWaves/American Shipper stories by Eric Kulisch.

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Source: https://www.freightwaves.com/news
Editor: Eric Kulisch, Supply Chain and Air Cargo Editor

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