And another one... https://www.avweb.com/aviation-news/electric-ground-effect-seaglider-in-flight-tests/?MailingID=1088 Part aircraft, hydrofoil, and boat.
Aviation startup ZeroAvia flies largest ever hydrogen-electric aircraft https://www.cbsnews.com/news/hyrdrogen-electric-flight-zeroavia-zero-emission-commercial-aviation/?intcid=CNI-00-10aaa3a A startup company made aviation history Thursday when it successfully flew the largest ever hydrogen-electric powered aircraft, which could pave the way for less environmentally harmful flights.
Yeah, they are converting the existing Dash-8. Makes a lot of sense, as that is a popular and proven small commuter plane. https://www.zeroavia.com/de-havilland
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/glenn/2023/nasas-x-57-maxwell-is-major-step-closer-to-flight-readiness NASA’s X-57 Maxwell is Major Step Closer to Flight Readiness Getting closer to an actual flight
Looks like NASA finally gave up on this one. https://www.avweb.com/aviation-news/nasa-axes-x-57-maxwell-before-first-flight/?MailingID=1402 These types of ventures best left to the private sector, instead of wasting tax payers' money. If it truly has potential, should be no problem raising the money. It took Elon Musk to give us electric cars, not some govt funded agency.
China's government is funding their EV industry and soon that money will find a way to eclipse even Tesla (after the country steals all Tesla's intellectual properties). The high-tech aviation industry is too important to let go (like the US did with the microchip industry). Airbus is government-funded (Germany, France, and Spain are significant shareholders) and I believe it makes sense for a US government-funded agency to do basic research that can help the US stay in the game. Airbus’s hydrogen system reaches required power output