News and Technical

F1 tower crane halves CO2 emissions on HS2 Euston site

Reducing CO2 emissions
Image: 219963543 © Nicoelnino | Dreamstime.com
The Skanska Costain Strabag joint venture on HS2’s Euston project is testing a crane powered by Formula 1-style technology that can drastically reduce CO2 emissions.

Part of HS2’s innovation programme, the tower crane on the Euston site, is powered by a 200kVA generator paired with an energy-storing flywheel system developed by Silverstone-based engineering specialist Punch Flybrid. Normally, a tower crane on such a project would be powered by a 500kVA diesel generator.

Results from May 2022 show that the hybrid crane more than halved the diesel consumption of a single tower crane to 6.3 litres per hour. That equates to a saving of 4.8 tonnes of carbon – equivalent to the average monthly CO2 emissions of 40 family cars.

Incorporated inside the Punch Flybrid-supplied unit, the flywheel is housed in a vacuum chamber to all but eliminate energy-sapping resistance that would result from contact with the air.

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