
Cargo flights within the British Isles will commence once certification for the engine, airframe integration and planned services are obtained and all retrofit and training work is complete.
ZA600-equipped Cessna Caravan will initially power domestic cargo services, which ZeroAvia claims will likely to be the world’s first hydrogen-electric commercial operations.
East Midlands Airport-headquartered specialist aviation services provider RVL and ZeroAvia say analysis confirms that the ZA600-enabled Cessna Caravan would meet existing operational requirements while virtually eliminating the climate impact of operations.
There are nearly 1,000 aircraft operating cargo routes around the world today that could in future be powered by ZA600 powertrains, according to ZeroAvia.
The current agreement focuses on one type of aircraft, Cessna Caravan 208B, with RVL working alongside zero-emission specialist MONTE on the aircraft lease.
The partners will explore opportunities to launch further small turboprop operations in the growing RVL network based on the success of the initial operations, as well as expand the technology across its other operations when the technology and operating conditions permit.
ZeroAvia’s hydrogen-electric engines use hydrogen in fuel cells to generate electricity to power electric motors that turn propulsors, with the only byproduct being water.
Analysis suggests that switching to fuel cell propulsion can provide an overall climate impact reduction in the region of 90%.
Further, hydrogen-electric propulsion can reduce overall operating costs for carriers due to the lower requirement for maintenance and lower fuel costs in the scaled operations.

ZeroAvia Founder & CEO Val Miftakhov said: “Today is a proud day for all of our team in our pursuit of a clean future of flight as we now have a confirmed launch operator with concrete plans to fly aircraft powered by the ZA600 engine.
“We have the engine design; we have the integration plans for the launch airframe; we have the solutions to provide the hydrogen fuel; and we have the customers wanting to operate the first routes.
“We now need to double our attention on the certification testing that will get this route flying and then ramp up production for our other confirmed ZA600 customers.”
RVL Aviation CEO Dave Connor said: “This is a genuinely exciting initiative, and it is a crucial step forward for our ambition to be at the heart of the global effort to decarbonise this sector.
“The team at ZeroAvia has done a remarkable job to lead and progress this technology, and everyone at RVL Aviation is proud to be on this path alongside other forward-thinking businesses.
“Sustainability is not a single action. Rather it is a series of steps: some small, some large, that add up to the inexorable progress that society demands and we all seek.
“This zero-emission initiative is a large step, and we look forward to operating the first scheduled commercial flights by this aircraft.”