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TaxiBot Ready To Cut Cost and Carbon Footprint for Taxiing
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The TaxiBot vehicle burns a small fraction of the fuel expended by a typical airline to taxi to its takeoff position.
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The TaxiBot vehicle burns a small fraction of the fuel expended by a typical airline to taxi to its takeoff position.
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The TaxiBot vehicle, designed to tow airliners from airport gates to runways without their engines running, recently made another breakthrough by earning a supplemental type certificate from both the European Aviation Safety Agency and the Civil Aviation Authority of Israel for use with Boeing 737NG narrowbodies. The certification builds on approvals covering all earlier versions of the 737 family.


The semi-robotic, pilot-controlled TaxiBot system has undergone development since 2008 by Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) in partnership with Lufthansa LEOS and France’s TLD. Now the partners are working on getting an equivalent STC to cover use with Airbus airliners. German flagcarrier Lufthansa has used the vehicle in support of commercial operations at Frankfurt Airport since November 2014, and IAI is actively marketing it to other operators.


TaxiBot’s readiness for service appears well-timed, as airlines and airports feel pressure to further reduce air transport’s environmental footprint in response to last week’s adoption by ICAO of new global market-based measures to reduce carbon emissions as aviation’s contribution to the newly adopted Paris Agreement. According to IAI, TaxiBot consumes around 25 to 30 liters of fuel to tow a 737 or A320 to its takeoff position, compared with as much as 1,250 liters to taxi an aircraft under its own power in a typical 17-minute operation. The use of TaxiBot also promises a significant cut in carbon dioxide emissions, from around 7,040 pounds per typical taxi operation to less than 132 pounds.


Ground handlers couple the TaxiBot to the aircraft’s main nose landing gear at the gate and then decouple the vehicle on the taxiway as the aircraft prepares to move onto the runway. The pilot retains full control of taxiing, operating the TaxiBot via the tiller and brake pedals, and the system requires no modification to the aircraft. Trials of the TaxiBot have shown the system capable of taxiing a fully loaded 737 at a speed of 23 knots.


The significant reduction in fuel prices this year might have diluted the business case somewhat for investing in such a system, but TaxiBot project director Ron Braier told AIN that operators can still expect to cover the cost of the equipment (for which it hasn't published a list price) in just over two years. Customers will likely include airlines needing their own taxiing equipment at their base airports, ground handling providers and airports.


TaxiBot faces competition from Wheeltug of the U.S., which has been conducting its own trials with a 737-800 testbed aircraft provided by Air Transat. Last year, the manufacturer indicated the system, which uses electric motors, will enter service in 2017.



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