http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/mar/23/pass-notes-2750-airship Pass notes No 2,750: the airship
As oil runs out, they could be making a comeback
guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 23 March 2010 19.30 GMT
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So airships really exist? I thought they were dreamed up by Hollywood, like jetpacks or Sandra Bullock's cheekbones. They've been gracing the skies in one form or another since 1784, when the Frenchman Jean-Pierre Blanchard fitted a hand-powered propeller to a balloon. They're nowhere near as popular as they were in the 1930s but they are still being made for the military: the US navy runs the four-year-old MZ-3A, while the Thai army has just taken delivery of the one-man Sky Dragon, at a cost of £7m.
So why are they in the news now? They may be about to make a comeback as oil starts to run out, according to Oxford University's Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment. They may be too slow for most passengers, but not for freight. One airship could carry nine times as much cargo as a 747-400F, using far less fuel.
But why can't I hop on a dirigible next time I want to go to New York? There are companies that offer sightseeing flights in the US, Germany and Japan, but the industry has never recovered from the Hindenburg disaster in 1937. A zeppelin that had just crossed the Atlantic burst into flames over Lakehurst, New Jersey, killing 36.
Are they still a fire hazard? Not now they're full of helium rather than hydrogen. Airship lovers say they are safer than planes – even if you shoot one, it will just slowly drift down to earth.
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