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Design, Economic Competitiveness, and Profitability of a 2025 LNG Fueled Turboprop for the LNG Air Transportation System J. Gibbs, B. Nagel.

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Presentation on theme: "Design, Economic Competitiveness, and Profitability of a 2025 LNG Fueled Turboprop for the LNG Air Transportation System J. Gibbs, B. Nagel."— Presentation transcript:

1 Design, Economic Competitiveness, and Profitability of a 2025 LNG Fueled Turboprop for the LNG Air Transportation System J. Gibbs, B. Nagel

2 Contents What is LNG? Motivation & Previous Work Research Questions
Market Share/Profitability Assessment Process Results Conclusions

3 What is LNG? H H H C H H C C H C … H H H H H C C … H H H H H H
Liquefied version of natural gas, stored at cryogenic temperatures with cryogenic tanks Less dense but also lighter than jet fuel (more energy containing, C-H bonds, fewer C-C bonds than encourage compactness) Cheaper and fewer lifecycle emissions than Jet A for all GHG species Fewer carbons per C-H bond  lower combustion CO2 per unit energy/unit of mechancial work High combustion energy bond H H H C H H C C H C H H H H H C C H H H H H H

4 Motivation / Previous Work: 2009
Level 0 AC design and mission assessment Level 1 price and emissions Used average prices for production processes, Used stoichiometric calculation for CO2 emissions,

5 Motivation / Previous Work: 2013
LNG Only Jet A-1 Only Full LNG Aircraft (New Aircraft) Full Fuel Available Payload: 100% LNG Fuel: % ? NR Jet (Baseline) 2 Engine LNG (50% Retrofit) Full Fuel Available Payload: 100% LNG Fuel: 0% Full Fuel Available Payload: 37% LNG Fuel: 23% Rigorous (level 2+) weight, cost, emissions and mission performance assessment Establish relationships between design changes, ROI, emissions reduction per $ of investment By accident, we found we can do this for an LNG aircraft without generating a new detailed design if a Jet A performance model is available

6 Motivation / Previous Work: 2013
LNG Only Jet A-1 Only Full LNG Aircraft (New Aircraft) Full Fuel Available Payload: 100% LNG Fuel: % ? NR Jet (Baseline) 2 Engine LNG (50% Retrofit) Full Fuel Available Payload: 100% LNG Fuel: 0% Full Fuel Available Payload: 37% LNG Fuel: 23%

7 LNG Aircraft Design Changes
Almost no changes Some changes (combustor retrofit) Significant changes (composites rqd)

8 Research Questions What are the likely manufacturer profitability and likely market share of an alternatively fueled new aircraft design? What design sensitivities drive these numbers? Mission Requirements Design Goal (min Fuel burn or gross weight) Generate Initial Geometry Available Technology Execute Design Loop Conventional Design Process

9 Research Questions What are the likely manufacturer profitability and likely market share of an alternatively fueled new aircraft design? What design sensitivities drive these numbers? Mission Requirements Design Goal (min Fuel burn or gross weight) Design Goal (max Market Share / IRR) Generate Initial Geometry Available Technology Market Share/Profitability Assessment Execute Design Loop Design Process Modifications

10 Pre-Design Processes: Market Share/Profitability Assessment
Establish operating costs of competitors 2) Derive a market share assessment law (EIS, Opex)  examine the eco system 3) Take best guess for new aircraft (markish-model) 4) Determine pricing sensitivity and IRR scenarios

11 1) Incumbents and Competitors
ATR 72 (31.96 orders / year), 68 seats, 275 knots, no stretch possible, EIS 1989 Average Bombardier Q-400 (32.27 orders / year), seats, stretch possible, 360 knots, EIS 1999 44% better fuel max range, 24% higher acquisition cost, Average 3 potential new entrants from India, China, South Korea

12 2) Ecosystem

13 3) Development Costs for new TP aircraft
New aircraft cost Markish 777 Dev & MFG part cost breakdown % Dev & MFG part effort Raymer new aircraft R&D + Boeing 777 share same cost part breakdown and non recurring costs per pound per part (no fixed cost) Raymer/Dapca IV RTD&E Costs (Does contain fixed costs) Estimate Changes LNG Aircraft Sub-system Development Effort Percentage of Jet A Subsystem Effort LNG Turboprop Estimated Development Cost ($USD) Baseline Jet A Turboprop development cost ($USD) Wing Empennage Fuselage Landing Gear Installed Engine Systems Payloads 90% 100% 125% 25% 110% $2,442,156,174 $2,081,008,647

14 3) Manufacturing Cost Model
1st Unit Cost Markish Learning Curve Assumptions Nth Unit Cost

15 3) Manufacturing Cost Model
1st Unit Cost Markish Learning Curve Assumptions Nth Unit Cost Pick an average margin

16 4) Pricing Sensitivity Customer break even
50-50 MFR/Customer split of econ benefits

17 4) Pricing Sensitivity 5.7 % margin

18 Results for 5.7% mfr margin

19 Results: Operating cost differences vs. competitors
Operating Cost Reductions relative to Incumbent Turboprops (Q400 & ATR 72) Older jet fueled turboprops with acquisition price discounts New Q400 derivative Jet fuel Turboprop New LNG Turboprop 5%-6% 5.1% 9%-15% Operating Cost Advantages of a new LNG turboprop relative to future competitors Older jet fueled turboprops with acquisition price discounts New Q400 derivative Jet fuel Turboprop Current Turboprops 3%-11% 4.9%-8.9% 9%-15%

20 Results: Profitability & Market Share Scenarios
Un-discounted profits Manufacturing Profit Margin Total # of Aircraft Built, Maximum Build Rates, Resulting Market Share 316 aircraft, 2.5 aircraft per month: 24% market share 630 aircraft, 5 aircraft per month, 47% market share 1005 aircraft, 8.3 aircraft per month, 75% market share 5.7% mfr margin (50-50 split of cost saving benefits between manufacturer and airline) Not Profitable $4,265,524,201.87 $7,818,669,957.21 20% mfr margin $1,546,367,252.71 $7,729,047,300.75 $13,591,208,455.33 25% mfr margin (maximum for positive airline ROI) $2,153,800,541.22 $8,940,069,363.29 $15,609,578,559.57 Actual market share depends on strength of actual competitive response Market size allows for only 2-3 incumbents to all be profitable Internal Rate of Return Grid Manufacturing Profit Margin Market Share, Total # of Aircraft Built & Maximum Build Rates 316 aircraft, 2.5 aircraft per month: 24% market share 630 aircraft, 5 aircraft per month, 47% market share 1005 aircraft, 8.3 aircraft per month, 75% market share 5.7% mfr margin (50-50 split of cost saving benefits between manufacturer and airline) Not Profitable 9.3% 17.1% 20% mfr margin 4.5% 14.0% 21.8% 25% mfr margin (maximum for positive airline ROI) 5.9% 15.4% 23.2%

21 Results: Cashflow

22 Conclusions What are the likely manufacturer profitability and likely market share of an alternatively fueled new aircraft design ? What design sensitivities drive these numbers ? With a 5.7% manufacturing margin, % IRR can be achieved vs. likely competitive responses Lease financing is required Infrastructure investment is 20% of required lease financing for to equip all commercial airports

23 Conclusions What are the likely manufacturer profitability and likely market share of an alternatively fueled new aircraft design? What design sensitivities drive these numbers? Mission Requirements Design Goal (min Fuel burn or gross weight) Design Goal (max Market Share / IRR) Generate Initial Geometry Available Technology Market Share/Profitability Assessment Execute Design Loop Can Generate Profitability Sensitivities for Fuselage design MFR margin Infrastructure spend Cruise speed

24 Questions?

25 Backup Slides

26


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