Elfly Group Presents All-Electric Seaplane Design

Norway's Elfly Group proudly presented the new design of its pure, all-electric commercial seaplane, dubbed NoEmi (for No Emission) in Oslo on June 14, 2023. A 100-strong audience, comprising international industry guests, stakeholders, members of the Innovation Research Group SINTEF, municipalities and media experienced a full-scale cabin virtual reality (VR) tour of this innovative amphibious aircraft (EG1A). The prototype (non-passenger version) of NoEmi is being readied for flight in 2025.

Noemi is being designed for flexible mobility, with a boat-inspired hull that will enable the aircraft to take off using little power. The seaplane, with a non-pressurized cabin, will be powered by two electric motors with up to 1MW combined output. It will be capable of 200km air journeys, flying at up to 250km/h. The design is part of a research project funded by private investors and the Research Council of Norway (RCN).

Noemi is currently being offered in three cabin layouts. First, as a business/executive cabin with nine seats, plus luggage, complemented by a VIP layout with six seats, wherein the whole aircraft could be chartered.  Second, a tourist pleasure-flight model with 13 seats, minus baggage, will also be offered. In a nod to its flexible functionality, a third cargo version is also planned, plus a Medevac version. Elfly is working to obtain certification for its EG1A test vehicle to CS23 Level 4, which will enable the aircraft to evolve up to a 19-seat seaplane

Elfly to obtain AOC to fly the aircraft

Elfly intends to pursue an operator's certificate and bring the first aircraft into service, connecting the fjords of Norway. The hope is to have the first 15 seaplanes flying along the west coast of Norway by 2030. “Thereafter, we could expand into other short hop markets,  considering that 80% of the world's population live by the sea,” said Eric Lithun, CEO of Elfly.

“Our goal is to bring innovation to the whole supply chain and make the process as seamless as possible,” added Eric, a technology entrepreneur who has invested in several start-up companies. He founded Elfly in 2018 in Bergen.  

The Noemi is a modern-day amphibious aircraft with lithium batteries and an electric engine, inspired by the venerable de Havilland Twin Otter and Grumman’s Mallard - “two great flying machines,” highlights Eric.  Noemi will feature a large cargo door and its cabin will be fully accessible for wheelchair users.

With the world focused on sustainability and the environment (Norway has pledged to be all-electric in 2040; Denmark and Sweden a decade earlier) we see wider opportunities with the creation of affordable sea terminals, versus complex infrastructure, he added.

Norway is ideally located to pioneer next-gen, environmentally friendly seaplanes, with more than 1,000 fjords and 450,000 lakes. Potential routes include Bergen to Stavanger, used by 550,000 passengers annually. Some 500,000 travel by bus (a three-hour journey) and 70,000 by ferry.  Noemi would cut the journey time to under an hour.

Elfly will be at Paris Air Show next week (June 19 to 23) where it plans to disclose new partners/suppliers on the project.