The Anonymous Widower

Singapore Nods To 1.2 GW Of Low-Carbon Electricity Imports From Vietnam

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on offshoreWIND.biz.

This is the sub-heading.

Singapore’s Energy Market Authority (EMA) has granted conditional approval to Sembcorp Utilities (SCU), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Sembcorp Industries, to import 1.2 GW of low-carbon electricity, including offshore wind power, from Vietnam

This is the first paragraph.

The conditional approval means the project by SCU has been preliminarily assessed to be technically and commercially viable. The approval facilitates the process of obtaining necessary regulatory nods and licences for the project.

So now the real planning can begin.

This map shows Singapore and Vietnam.

The article says this about the electricity connection.

The low-carbon electricity is planned to be transmitted from Vietnam to Singapore via new subsea cables that will span a distance of around 1,000 kilometres.

My only worry about this project, is will China object to wind farms in the South China Sea, which they seem to increasingly regard as solely belonging to them.

I have a few thoughts.

Singapore’s Energy Import Policy

These last two paragraphs of the article describe Singapore’s energy import policy.

In 2021, Singapore unveiled its plans to import up to 4 GW of low-carbon electricity by 2035.

To date, EMA has granted conditional approvals to projects from various sources, comprising 2 GW from Indonesia, 1 GW from Cambodia, and 1.2 GW from Vietnam.

Note.

  1. 4.2 GW of interconnectors will be available from Indonesia, Cambodia and Vietnam.
  2. In 2022, Singapore’s total electricity consumption was 54.9 TWh, according to the Singapore government.
  3. 54.9 TWh averaged out over the year is 6.3 GW.
  4. According to Wikipedia, 95 % of their electricity is generated by gas.

It looks like Singapore will will be needing to import more energy.

Will Developing Countries Benefit From Energy Exports?

Singapore is purchasing electricity from its neighbours in this example.

I believe that there are many countries around the world, who will be able to develop energy exports based on renewable energy.

Conclusion

We will see lots more projects like this.

October 25, 2023 Posted by | Energy | , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Lumo Carbon Data Shows Its Trains Are 22 Times Greener Than Flying

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on Rail Advent.

These paragraphs detail how the figures were obtained.

To mark the second anniversary of its branding as ‘Lumo’, the operator commissioned consultancy firm Arup to provide an independent report about all direct emissions from its operations; emissions from the grid-supplied energy it uses; and other emissions in its supply chain.

Scope 1: Direct emissions from operations that are owned and controlled by Lumo;
Scope 2: Emissions from the use of grid-supplied electricity, heat, steam and/or cooling by Lumo;
Scope 3: All other emissions that occur in the value chain of Lumo.

In the last two years, Lumo has carried over two million passengers. The figures reveal that, per passenger, emissions from a London-to-Edinburgh journey are twenty-two times the level for flying (149 kgCO2e) than for using Lumo (6.8kgCO2e).

I have a few thoughts.

Carbon Savings With LNER

LNER’s Class 801 trains are similar to Lumo’s Class 803 trains.

The main difference, is that the LNER have emergency diesel engines, whereas Lumo have emergency batteries to run the trains systems, if the catenary goes down.

So LNER on balance will generate a bit more carbon than Lumo.

But the difference will be marginal.

Carbon Savings With Avanti West Coast

Avanti’s Class 390 trains to Scotland, are all-electric, so there will be a carbon-saving.

Probably about the same as with LNER.

Avanti West Coast’s New Class 807 Trains

If the Class 807 trains were cars, they would be Lotuses.

  • They are electric only and have no heavy diesel engines or traction batteries.
  • They don’t even have emergency batteries for when the catenary fails.
  • They have a redesigned nose. Is it more aerodynamic?
  • The heavy tilt mechanism is history.
  • As with all the other Hitachi high speed trains, they are capable of 125 mph, or 140 mph if the signalling permits.

These trains will undoubtedly have faster acceleration and deceleration and could probably knock minutes off the timings at all the stops.

Tucked away beside the Grand Union Sets Out Stirling Ambitions article in the December 2022 Edition of Modern Railways is a report on Avanti West Coast’s application for a second service between Euston and Liverpool.

This is said.

Avanti West Coast has applied for access rights for its second hourly Euston to Liverpool service, starting from December 2023, although a phased introduction of the new service is likely. This would make use of Avanti’s new fleet of 10×7-car Class 807 Hitachi EMUs, which are expected to enter service from Autumn 2023. The ‘807s’ would be deployed on the current hourly Liverpool service, on which a call at Liverpool South Parkway would be added. (provision is made for this in the December 2022 timetable.).

Pendolinos would then operate the second service each hour, calling at Lichfield Trent Valley and Tamworth.

A linespeed project is in progress to raise the permissible speed for non-tilting trains on the West Coast Main Line, and Avanti’s new Hitachi trains will take advantage of this.

I can’t wait to go to Liverpool in one of these trains.

Their  carbon emissions should be in line with Lumo.

Avanti West Coast’s New Class 805 Trains

These are equivalent to the Class 802 trains, but with probably Class 807 train interiors and looks.

I wonder how long these trains will keep their diesel engines before battery power is the most affordable option.

Once they go battery-electric, their  carbon emissions should be in line with Lumo.

Conclusion

I can’t see any other mantra than.

Electric good, diesel bad

Especially, if like most computers, it’s just plug and play.

 

October 24, 2023 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Interview: Rethinking ‘Unusual And Special’ CrossCountry

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on Railway Gazette.

This is the sub-heading.

CrossCountry’s National Rail Contract came into force on October 15, giving the business some medium-term certainty and Managing Director Tom Joyner a chance to reflect with Rail Business UK on its evolving role as a truly national train operator.

These are thoughts based on what is said in the article.

Unusual And Special

This paragraph is Tom Joyner’s explanation of what he meant.

‘CrossCountry is unusual and special. The fact that we’re a long-distance operator that connects so many places means we can be there for something different’, believes Managing Director Tom Joyner as he reflects on the operator’s short and medium-term future following the award on September 20 of its National Rail Contract.

I have found CrossCountry useful in the past to efficiently visit some towns and cities in the past, when Ipswich Town are playing away.

Arriva UK’s Contract To Run CrossCountry

This paragraph details the operating contract.

Under the NRC, incumbent Arriva UK Trains will continue to run the non-London inter-city passenger business as it has since November 2007. Commencing on October 15, the contract has a guaranteed core term of four years and an option for this to be extended to eight. The government will take the revenue risk, as it has done since the pandemic, with Arriva receiving a fixed fee to operate the business, with limited bonuses on offer if certain performance targets are met.

As a resident of London, I rarely use CrossCountry. But my only obvious improvement would be that CrossCountry ran trains with a smaller carbon footprint.

Post Pandemic Purpose

This paragraph details their post-pandemic purpose.

‘CrossCountry hasn’t benefitted from re-franchising in the last 10 years and this has presented challenges, particularly from a rolling stock perspective. We’ve been working closely with DfT to agree the post-pandemic purpose and vision for CrossCountry and how these fit into our railway network’, Joyner reports.

Most rail operators in the UK are London-centric or regional. Perhaps CrossCountry should become more ‘Unusual And Special’ to serve the important places, that other rail operators cannot reach.

One place would be the National Memorial Arboretum, which I wrote about in New Station Proposed For National Arboretum.

There must be lots of other places.

It could surely be the transport network for those who wanted to roam the UK on a holiday.

Could it be at the heart of levelling up the regions of the UK?

Fleet Under Pressure

This paragraph describes the current fleet and its condition.

Perhaps most reassuring for regular users of CrossCountry is news that the NRC will allow the operator to deliver some improvements to its train fleet, the backbone of which are the Class 220 and 221 DEMUs Arriva inherited from Virgin Trains in 2007. Other than some minor cosmetic work, these have not been refurbished since they were introduced in 2001. These 200 km/h Voyager trainsets are augmented by a fleet of Class 170 Turbostar DMUs for 160 km/h operation on regional routes to Cardiff and Stansted Airport; CrossCountry withdrew its last ex-British Rail IC125 High Speed Trains on September 18.

I do think, that some way must be found to reduce the operators large carbon footprint.

Are Battery Trains The Answer?

This paragraph gives Tom Joyner’s view on battery trains.

He is equally sceptical about the prospects for alternative traction technology to replace diesel. ‘I keep hearing views from industry colleagues who say, “electrification isn’t the answer, battery is the answer”. But you can’t get a battery that’s got the range that we need, even on the regional services currently worked by Class 170s.’

Birmingham New Street and Leicester is only 39.8 miles, so this route for a Class 170 train, might be possible for battery-electric trains, when there is electrification or charging at Leicester.

Perhaps the plan would be to run battery-electric trains between Birmingham and Leicester and see how the passengers react and how this will change the economics of the other Class 170 services?

A Lot More Food For Thought

There are some more sections in the article, that are worth a read.

  • Sustainability Challenge
  • Service Offering
  • Commuters’ ‘Coventry Conundrum’
  • Doing Something Different

This paragraph towards the end of the article makes the levelling up case, that CrossCountry can fulfil.

He suggests that the operator may not need as structured a timetable, and that its operating model could involve serving more destinations rather than the current largely fixed hourly axes crossing in Birmingham. ‘We serve regional Britain and when we talk about levelling up, the railway company best placed to level up in terms of connecting the whole of Britain is us’, he insists. This ethos is reflected in the daily Cardiff – Edinburgh service, with Joyner noting that this will not be a repeating service through the day.

Read the whole article.

I wish Tom Joyner the best of luck!

 

October 24, 2023 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , | Leave a comment

Cardiff – Edinburgh Open Access Train Service Proposal Under Development

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on Railway Gazette.

This is the first paragraph.

Grand Union has begun industry consultation over a proposal to operate five open access services a day between Cardiff and Edinburgh, and separately is looking at rolling stock options for its planned London – Carmarthen and London – Stirling services.

These are my thoughts.

Current Train Services Between Cardiff and Edinburgh

I have chosen Monday, the 4th of December and find, that the basic fare is £120.40 with changes at Birmingham New Street and Preston, for a journey of six hours and 52 minutes.

There would appear to be three other sensible trains on that day and the others take around seven hours and cost over £230.

Cardiff and Edinburgh, is one of those routes, where the one-third saving of a railcard will pay for the card on the first trip.

Current Flights Between Cardiff and Edinburgh

I have again chosen Monday, the 4th of December and there is one direct flight that takes one hour and 15 minutes and costs £130.

There are flights under forty pounds, via Dublin or Belfast City airports, which take 4½ and 9 hours.

What About The Sleeper?

If you live in Cardiff and want to get to Edinburgh, early on the 4th, it’s probably better to take an evening train to London on the day before and then get the Caledonian Sleeper to Scotland.

An ideal train could be a sleeper between Plymouth and Edinburgh, that could be picked up at Bristol Parkway, that I wrote about in Would A North-East And South West Sleeper Service Be A Good Idea?.

But that train is only a proposal.

Although, there could be a luxury coach or conveniently-timed direct train to link Swansea, Cardiff Central and Cardiff Bay to Bristol Parkway for the sleeper.

I Feel That A Cardiff and Edinburgh Service May Have Possibilities

Grand Union are proposing to operate five open access services a day between Cardiff and Edinburgh, which seems about right.

I estimate that the service would take around seven hours. But that time is based on the fastest journeys to Birmingham New Street from both ends of the route.

Breaking it down further into three legs via Birmingham New Street and Doncaster, following times could be possible.

  • Cardiff and Birmingham New Street – two hours and five minutes
  • Birmingham New Street and Doncaster – two hours and five minutes
  • Doncaster and Edinburgh – three hours and ten minutes

Note.

  1. These times are based on average of the better times of the day.
  2. They could probably be improved by more electrification and a bi-mode train like a Class 802 or Class 755 train.

They total up to seven hours and twenty minutes.

Intermediate Stops

These are listed as Cardiff, Newport, Severn Tunnel Junction, Gloucester, Birmingham New Street, Derby, Sheffield, Doncaster, York, Newcastle and Edinburgh.

Times and distances for the various legs are as follows.

  • Cardiff and Severn Tunnel Junction – 21.6 miles – Electrified – 26 mins
  • Severn Tunnel Junction and Bromsgrove – 72.5 miles – Not Electrified – One hour and thirteen mins
  • Bromsgrove and Birmingham New Street – 14.3 miles – Electrified – 21 mins
  • Birmingham New Street and Derby – 41.2 miles – Not Electrified – 33 mins
  • Derby and Sheffield – 36.4 miles – Being Electrified – 30 mins
  • Sheffield and Doncaster – 16.8 miles – Not Electrified – 24 mins
  • Doncaster and Edinburgh – 237.1 miles – Electrified – two hours and 54 mins

These add up to six hours and 21 minutes.

Is Cardiff and Edinburgh An Ideal Route For A Battery-Electric Train?

The route has three unelectrified sections

  • Severn Tunnel Junction and Bromsgrove – 72.5 miles
  • Birmingham New Street and Derby – 41.2 miles
  • Sheffield and Doncaster – 16.8 miles

Note.

  1. I am assuming Derby and Sheffield is electrified, under the Midland Main Line Electrification.
  2. The longest unelectrified section is the 72.5 miles between Severn Tunnel Junction and Bromsgrove.
  3. All three unelectrified sections are sandwiched between two electrified sections, that are long enough to charge the trains.

A battery-electric train with a range of 80-90 miles should be able to handle the route.

As Cardiff and Swansea is only 45.7 miles, with a range of 100 miles, the service could be extended to Swansea.

Competition

This article on Rail Advent is entitled New Cardiff – Scotland Train Service Announced As Part Of New CrossCountry Contract.

This is the relevant paragraph.

Building on the changes made to the timetables in May this year, further enhancements will include a new direct service daily between Cardiff and Edinburgh to strengthen connections across Great Britain.

Will this bang a hole in Grand Union’s plans or is there room in the market for two operators?

On the other hand LNER and Hull Trains run a 1/5 split on the King’s Cross and Hull route.

Tourism

In the past ten years, I’ve travelled regularly between London and Edinburgh by train.

  • On those trips, I’ve met a large number of tourists from countries like Canada, Germany, Italy and the United States.
  • Many were also visiting Paris using the Eurostar.
  • Cardiff, Edinburgh and King’s Cross all have excellent hotels nearby.
  • There are other historic and/or large cities on the route, who might like to get in on the act, like Bath, Birmingham, Bristol, Durham, Glasgow, Newcastle, Sheffield and York.
  • Cities, hotels, museums and the train companies could form a marketing group.

Cardiff and Edinburgh would complete a very useful triangular route for anoraks, business travellers and tourists.

Conclusion

Cardiff and Edinburgh could be a new route that would work well!

 

 

 

October 24, 2023 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Balmoral Launches New Scour Protection System For Jacket Foundations

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on offshoreWIND.biz.

This is the sub-heading.

Following the launch of its HexDefence scour protection solution for monopile foundations earlier this year, Balmoral has now launched a HexDefence system specifically designed for offshore wind jacket foundations.

This is the first paragraph.

At the beginning of this year, the Scottish engineering company introduced HexDefence for monopile structures, which integrates seabed protection and flow reduction to minimise operational costs and prevent cable failure. Balmoral said the solution could potentially cut costs by up to 70 per cent when compared to the conventional method of rock dumping.

Balmoral have now developed the system, so it can be used for jacket foundations.

Check out Balmoral’s web site and the HexDefence web site.

October 24, 2023 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , | Leave a comment

Hospital Pioneers Cancer Service For Over 70s That Saves Lives And Money

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article in The Times.

This is the sub-heading.

Treatment is adapted to take into account age-related illnesses, such as heart disease, diabetes and dementia.

These three paragraphs outline, what the Christie Hospital is doing.

The Christie Hospital in Manchester is pioneering a specialist cancer service for elderly patients under plans to tackle a “silver tsunami” of cases.

More than 200 patients have been treated by the new team, which was set up to meet the more complex care needs of an ageing population.

The service has nearly halved the number of unplanned hospital admissions among older cancer patients, improving survival and quality of life.

But it’s the graph that follows that I find interesting.

It shows the cancer incidence rate (per 100,000 population) in 2020 by gender and age at diagnosis.

I am a control engineer and statistician and one of the most interesting things in a graph like this is the rate of increase or in this graph’s case the rate of decrease, as the graph effectively has the present at the top.

I have used an old trick and looked at the difference between the groups and the difference between the difference.

Note.

  1. It seems that the rate of increase of cancer diagnosis with age seems to increase with ages of 60-64 and 25-29.
  2. This would seem to correspond to those born before 1960 and those born before 1995.
  3. As a coeliac, I know that the first test for coeliac disease, which used endoscopy was introduced around 1960.
  4. The modern genetic test for coeliac disease was developed in the 1990s.

Is it coincidence, that the rate of increase of cancer diagnosis with age seems to increase, when a better diagnosis for coeliac disease was introduced?

These are my thoughts!

Coeliac Disease And Me

I am coeliac and I was born in 1947. I wasn’t diagnosed as coeliac until 1997.

I was an unhealthy child, with all sorts of avenues being chased, so in the end they just took my tonsils out.

  • It should be remembered, that there was no test for coeliac disease in children until 1960.
  • I’ve also only met one coeliac older than me and both her parents were GPs and she was diagnosed by food elimination.
  • In fact, I never met a coeliac until I was about 25. He was the two-year-old son of one of C’s friends.

At fifty, an elderly locum gave me a present of a blood test to clear up my long-term health problems. The results showed that my body had very little Vitamin B12. Injections didn’t improve the level, so my GP sent me to Addenbrooke’s.

It was a Monday and all the consultant did was ask a nurse to take several vials of blood. He didn’t ask me any relevant questions or even touch me.

On the Wednesday morning, I got a letter from the hospital saying I was probably coeliac and it would be confirmed by endoscopy.

I must have been one of the first to have been diagnosed by a genetic test on a sample of blood.

Coeliac Disease And My Youngest Son

My youngest son was born in 1972 and after my diagnosis, my late wife felt he was coeliac, as physically he was so like me. But neither him nor our other two sons would get themselves tested.

I am now sure he was coeliac, as his daughter was born with a congenital hernia of the diaphragm and Swedish research says can happen with coeliac fathers. Luckily, she was born in the Royal London Hospital and thanks to heroic surgery at a few days old, she survived and is now in her first year at Southampton University.

Sadly my youngest son died of pancreatic cancer in 2011.

Coeliac Disease And Cancer

Nottingham University have shown that if you are coeliac and stick to a gluten-free diet, you are twenty-five percent less likely to suffer from cancer.

Cancer in the Over Sixties

The following is an extract from A Thought On Deaths Of The Elderly From Covid-19, which I wrote in April 2020.

How many undiagnosed coeliacs are there in those over seventy, who because they are coeliacs, have a compromised immune system?

I would be undiagnosed but for that elderly locum!

How many other coeliacs are there in the UK population?

  • Age UK has a figure of twelve million who are over 65 in the UK.
  • If 1-in-100, as stated by Coeliac UK, in the UK are coeliac, that is 120,000 coeliacs over 65, who are too old to have been diagnosed as a child, because no test existed.

Note that as of today 177,388 have been diagnosed with Covid-19.

Could the drop in the cancer rate of those born before 1960 be because of the availability of a test for coeliac disease, so that if they were a sickly child like me, they would be diagnosed? As I said earlier diagnosed coeliacs have a lower cancer rate than the general population.

Cancer in the Under Thirties

I was diagnosed in 1997 by a genetic blood test and there is no doubt that I have coeliac disease.

As the test is so simple, I wonder what proportion of coeliacs born since the Millennium have been diagnosed.

And how does this contribute to the drop in cancer cases?

More Research Needs To Be Done

It is obvious to me, that research needs to be done into the link between undiagnosed coeliacs and cancer.

It might be prudent to test every cancer patient for coeliac disease. My GP told me, that the test is not expensive and generally gives the right result.

October 23, 2023 Posted by | Health | , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Positive Traction Launches 08e – “The Future Of Sustainable Depot Operations”

The title of this post is the same as this article on Rail UK.

This is the first two paragraphs.

Positive Traction has launched the UK’s first re-engineered battery powered shunting locomotive – the 08e.

Free from carbon, NOx and particulate emissions the 08e can fulfil day-to-day operating needs as well as meet the demanding ESG requirement of shareholders, customers, employees and neighbouring communities.

Note.

  1. 996 Class 08 locomotives were originally produced between 1952 and 1962.
  2. Around a hundred are still in use on the UK rail network.
  3. This page on the Positive Traction web site, gives more details.

This could be a sensible use of technology, that carves itself a profitable niche market.

October 23, 2023 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Rolls-Royce Completes Next Step On Its Journey To Decarbonising Business Aviation

The title of this post, is the same as that of this press release from Rolls-Royce.

 

This is the sub-heading.

Rolls-Royce today announces the successful completion of a series of tests with 100% Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) on its latest generation of business aviation engines, the Pearl 15 and the Pearl 10X. The Pearl 15, the first member of the Pearl engine family, powers Bombardier’s Global 5500 and 6500 aircraft, while the Pearl 10X will power Dassault’s ultra-long-range flagship aircraft, the Falcon 10X.

These are the websites for the three aircraft, with number of passengers, typical cruise speed and range.

This screenshot from the Dassault Falcon 10X web site shows the range from London.

Note that Buenos Aires,  the Falkland Islands, Seattle, Seoul and Tokyo are all within range.

I have a few thoughts and observations.

Jet A-1 And 100% SAF

This paragraph from the press release describes how Rolls-Royce are testing the compatibility of Jet A-1 and 100% SAF.

As well as proving compatibility with 100% SAF another target of the test campaign was to run a back-to-back engine test with both Jet A-1 and SAF on the same Pearl 10X engine. The aim was to confirm further improvements in the environmental footprint when switching to SAF. The results from this first back-to-back engine emission test under standard certification conditions provides important correlations for the evaluation of future SAF within our environmental strategy.

Compatibility and back-to-back running is surely very important, as it could be many years before all airports can supply 100 % SAF for visiting jet aircraft.

The Fuels Used In The Tests And The Benefits

These two paragraphs from the press release describes the fuels used and the benefits..

The HEFA (Hydro-processed Esters and Fatty Acids) SAF was produced from waste-based sustainable feedstocks such as used cooking oils and waste fat. This fuel has the potential to significantly reduce net CO2 lifecycle emissions by about 80% compared to conventional jet fuel.

The back-to-back tests conducted with conventional fossil-based fuel and subsequently SAF also confirmed a cleaner combustion of the sustainable fuel, with significantly lower levels of non-volatile particulate matter (nvPM). In combination with the low NOx combustor technology of the Pearl 10X and its additive manufactured combustor tiles a reduction of all emissions was achieved.

Note.

  1. An eighty percent reduction in lifecycle emissions is not to be sneezed at.
  2. Cleaner combustion and low NOx emissions are very much bonuses.
  3. Additive manufacture is better known as 3D-printing and I’m not surprised that Rolls-Royce have embraced the technology.

As an engineer and retired light aircraft pilot, I suspect the tests have met Rolls-Royce’s objectives.

Moving To 100 % SAF

This is the final paragraph of the press release.

The tests demonstrated once again that Rolls-Royce’s current engine portfolio for large civil and business jet applications can operate with 100% SAF, laying the groundwork for moving this type of fuel towards certification. At present, SAF is only certified for blends of up to 50% with conventional jet fuel. By the end of 2023 Rolls-Royce will have proven that all its in-production Trent and business aviation engines are compatible with 100% SAF.

It must be a good selling point for aircraft equipped with Rolls-Royce engines, that the buyer knows that the aircraft can run on 100% SAF.

100 % SAF As An Airline Marketing Tool

It will be interesting to see how airlines use 100% SAF to sell tickets.

As an example, I can see routes like London and Scotland becoming very competitive.

  • Avanti  West Coast, LNER and Lumo already run all-electric trains to Edinburgh and Glasgow.
  • The technology exists to decarbonise trains to Aberdeen and Inverness..
  • Other open access operators could well move in to a lucrative market.
  • The only way, that the airlines will be able to compete on emissions, would be to move to 100 % SAF.

There must be hundreds of routes like London and Scotland around the world.

100 % SAF And Business Jets

In A Class 319 Train, But Not As We Know It!, I told this tale.

I am reminded of a tale, that I heard from a former GEC manager.

He was involved in selling one of GEC’s Air Traffic Control radars to a Middle Eastern country.

The only working installation of the radar was at Prestwick in Scotland, so he arranged that the dignitaries and the sales team would be flown to Prestwick in GEC’s HS 125 business jet.

As they disembarked at Prestwick and walked to the terminal, the pilot called the GEC Manager over.

The pilot told him “The Scottish Highlands at this time of the year, are one of the most beautiful places in the world! Would you and your guests like a low-level tour on the way back? I can arrange it, if you say so!”

Despite knowing GEC’s draconian attitude to cost control he said yes.

The sale was clinched!

I also remember an article in Flight International about how JCB sold diggers.

  • Dealers in a country like Greece would put together a party of prospective customers.
  • The customers would then be flown to East Midlands Airport in JCB’s business jet, which is close to the JCB factory at Rocester.
  • After  a sales demonstration and a tour of the factory they would be flown home.

I once met a lady who had been one of JCB’s cabin staff and she told me it was a very successful sales technique.

I suspect that a business jet running on 100 % SAF would be an even better sales aid.

There are also increasing protests from the greens about business jets, which are seen as producing pollution and are only the toys of the rich and powerful.

Surely, if they were running on 100 % SAF, this would make business jets more acceptable.

100 % SAF And Niche Airlines

In the web site for the Falcon 10X, there is a section called Mission Flexibility, where this is said.

As large as it is, the Falcon 10X can still access typical airports serving business aviation as well as others with challenging approaches. The Falcon 10X will be London City-capable so that it can fly you straight into the heart of global finance. When you’re ready for rest and relaxation, the 10X can whisk you to out-of-the-way corners of the world.

British Airways used to run a service between London City Airport and New York.

  •  The route used 32-seat Airbus A-318 airliners.
  • The flight stopped at Shannon for refuelling.
  • It was business class only.

I suspect someone will think about running a similar London City Airport and New York service using a Falcon 10X.

  • It has nineteen seats.
  • It could do it in one hop.
  • It could run on 100 % SAF.
  • British Airways must have all the passenger data from the discontinued service.
  • A Falcon 10X flies higher than a Boeing 767, Boeing 787 or an Airbus A350.

I have a feeling that flight time would be comparable or better to a flight between Heathrow and New York.

Conclusion

Rolls-Royce would appear to have the right strategy.

If I was going to New York in business class, I’d use it.

 

 

 

 

October 23, 2023 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Is There A Research Dermatologist Out There?

Consider.

  • I have mused about my skin before in My Strange Skin.
  • I have been feeling a bit odd because of Babet.
  • I have had problems with my left humerus for a few days now and my left hand has not been very co-operative.
  • Yesterday, I kept dropping my bag for a start.
  • Last night, I needed to go to the loo in the middle of the night. I could hardly walk, because of pain in my right lower leg.
  • But I’d forgotten to put the magic Udrate on my feet, before I went to bed. It does seem to stop the water leaking out of my skin.

This picture shows my left hand.

I damaged it badly in a fall, where I took the back off on the edge of a glass door. But with some glue from the Royal London and some TLC from the practice nurse, there are no scars. Surely, it shouldn’t mend that well.

As my ancestors include both Jews and Huguenots, did all those centuries in poor living conditions ghetto-harden my skin?

I hate mysteries and I suspect some of my questions could be answered by an experienced dermatologist.

 

 

 

October 23, 2023 Posted by | Health | , , , | 1 Comment

Cummins Enters Collaboration To Demonstrate Hydrogen Ecosystem

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article from Rental Management.

This is the first three paragraphs.

Cummins®, Columbus, Ind., has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Terex® Advance Mixer, Fort Wayne, Ind., a subsidiary of Terex Corp.; Edge Materials, Cloverdale, Ind.; and PCC Hydrogen, Louisville, Ky., to produce, trial and prove concrete mixer trucks powered by Cummins’ zero-carbon, hydrogen-fueled internal combustion engines.

The project aims to develop a full hydrogen ecosystem together with a hydrogen producer, vehicle manufacturer and end user. It is the first MoU of its kind signed by Cummins.

he four companies will unite their efforts, which will see Cummins’ X15H hydrogen internal combustion engines integrated into the Terex Advance Commander Series of front-discharge concrete mixer trucks. Edge Materials, a ready-mix concrete provider and Terex Advance customers will operate the hydrogen-powered trucks in challenging real-world environments including on construction sites and critical infrastructure projects. PCC Hydrogen, an ultra-low carbon intensity hydrogen producer, will supply the hydrogen fuel as well as stationary storage and dispensing services.

Note.

  1. The X15H engine also comes in diesel and natural gas versions.
  2. Cummins also make electrolysers, that can produce hydrogen.
  3. It looks like the collaboration has all bases covered.
  4. I suspect similar deals could be done all over the world and with other types of trucks.

It all sounds like a sensible way to go to me.

October 22, 2023 Posted by | Hydrogen | , , , , | Leave a comment