In its effort to go green, Boeing is looking for young engineers who can think outside the box. Good morning from Geneva.
Can aviation ever become sustainable?
Over the past few years, Boeing has had to answer this question at the same time as it tries to regain customers’ trust following the deadly crashes of two 737 MAX planes, which together killed 346 people.
That means Chris Raymond, the company’s first-ever chief sustainability officer, has to keep an eye on safety as he deals with the sustainability question, he told me yesterday over the phone.
“You can’t have sustainable aerospace unless you have safe aerospace. Any solution that actually scales up, first, has to be technically possible,” he said.
It’s one reason why he believes that, if the aviation sector really is to reach its goal of hitting net-zero by 2050, so-called sustainable aviation fuels (SAFs) will be a major part of the solution.
“If the objective is to radically reduce carbon emissions by 2050, there will be a lot of airplanes–60% to 70%–looking a lot like the ones we fly today,” Raymond said. (Planes don’t require significant re-engineering to switch from jet fuel to SAFs, which emit much less CO2).
Electric planes can only carry the “lower end” of passenger volume, Raymond said, as the size and weight of current batteries make larger planes unfeasible. He also doesn’t see hydrogen-fueled planes as being the solution. “There won’t be a lot,” according to the Boeing CSO, due to incompatible infrastructure, design challenges, and the lack of abundant, cheap, and green hydrogen.
On hearing these sober predictions, I wondered whether Boeing and other incumbents weren’t like car manufacturers before the arrival of Elon Musk’s Tesla: lacking both an outside-the-box vision and stratospheric levels of ambition.
Raymond assured me that wasn’t the case.
“You have to advocate for 2050 targets. You also have to look for Elon Musk engineers who explore different ways that are not technically possible yet. And that’s what we’re trying to do,” he explained.
Raymond acknowledged that sustainability is always part of the conversation with the new generation of talent, with no room for sophistry.
“[They] are educated on sustainability, whatever their discipline is. They’re more aware, and a lot of them are minoring in environmental science, and they are going to work for a values-based, purpose-driven company,” he said. “They sniff out” if you’re not serious.
Separately, read the latest piece from my colleague Jessica Mathews, which explores “what has quietly become one of the surest paths to an enviable job in Silicon Valley.” The Stanford Review, a student newspaper founded by Peter Thiel, has become a talent factory for his and other Silicon Valley companies.
More news below.
Peter Vanham peter.vanham@fortune.com @petervanham
|
|
|
Is Nvidia overvalued?
Investors piling into chipmaker Nvidia after its stellar earnings report Wednesday could be disappointed, as its lofty valuation would require an unprecedented run of profits to be justified. An analysis from Fortune’s Shawn Tully suggests that Nvidia would need to make $104 billion of annual profits within seven years–more than Apple today. For the time being, analysts see a bright future for Nvidia thanks to the A.I. boom, with one calling it “the most important company to civilization” over the next decade. Fortune
One euro
Beer maker Heineken has agreed to sell its Russia business for the symbolic sum of one euro ($1.10), finally leaving the country after pledging to do so soon after Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine last year. The beer giant will write off $323 million as part of its exit. Russia is now seizing the local operations of companies based in “unfriendly” states, like those of French firm Danone and Danish brewer Carlsberg. The Wall Street Journal
Change in appetite
Shares in Meituan fell by over 5% in Friday trading in Hong Kong after the Chinese food delivery company warned that the country’s sputtering economy was starting to weigh on sales. China’s property slump had pushed Chinese consumers to shift spending from big-ticket items to experiences like dining, helping boost Meituan’s sales by 33% to $9.3 billion last quarter. But the company warned on Thursday that it expected orders to slow this quarter as consumer confidence has dropped low enough to even affect takeout. Bloomberg
|
|
|
Deloitte’s 2024 Global Human Capital Trends Survey What does the future of work look like for your organization? Help shape Deloitte’s 2024 Human Capital Trends research report by sharing your perspective through this 10-minute survey. These insights will help uncover trends that impact the workplace and workforce of today and tomorrow. Make your voice heard.
|
| |
The 2023 Global 500 has arrived |
Download your FREE sample today. Now's your chance to access Fortune's Global 500 list on Fortune Analytics Get the full dataset behind the Global 500 - the ultimate benchmark of worldwide business success. Download now. |
|
|
Thanks for reading. If you liked this email, pay it forward. Share it with someone you know. Did someone share this with you? Sign up here. For previous editions, click here. To view all of Fortune's newsletters on the latest in business, go here.
|
|
|
| |
|