Waterloo launches sustainable flight school competition for students

Returning to in-person experiences in February: for more information. The competition seeks net-zero energy and carbon-neutral performance designs for a sustainable flight school of the future. The University of Waterloo is launching a student competition that seeks net-zero energy and carbon-neutral performance designs for a sustainable flight school of the future. Waterloo Institute for Sustainable Aeronautics (WISA) is partnering with the Waterloo Wellington Flight Centre (WWFC), Alsim Flight Training Solutions, and the Region of Waterloo International Airport to host the competition. The competition kicked off on January 17, 2022, with the winners set to receive $8,500 in total prize money.  "There has been an international shortage of pilots, with Boeing projecting 612,000 new pilots will be needed between 2021 and 2040," said Suzanne Kearns, director of WISA. "Flight training is an expensive endeavour for students and contributes to carbon and noise emissions." "Using innovative technologies such as electric aircraft, flight simulators, and virtual reality, it is feasible to reduce training costs and environmental impacts while simultaneously improving learning effectiveness," Kearns said. Student teams will prepare designs for the flight school buildings as well as operational considerations to optimize economic, social, and environmental sustainability, which will be reviewed by a team of judges made up of industry experts.   "The competition promises to spark a holistic rethinking of the aviation training sector as hubs for green innovation," said Bob Connors, general manager of WWFC.
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