Leonardo and the EU Clean Aviation JU are pleased to announce the first flight of the Next Generation Civil Tiltrotor – Technology Demonstrator , which took place at Leonardo’s Cascina Costa di Samarate facility.
This milestone marks the start of the flight test phase for one of the most advanced technology programmes in the European civil aviation landscape. The Next Generation Civil Tiltrotor programme aims to revolutionise civil vertical lift by combining helicopter versatility with fixed-wing aircraft performance. With a cruise speed of 280 knots and a range of approximately 1,000 nautical miles, the tiltrotor opens new scenarios for mobility, freight transport and Search & Rescue missions, enabling faster coverage of larger areas with a significantly reduced environmental footprint.
The NGCTR-TD has been developed within CleanSky2, a core initiative of the European Horizon 2020 programme and an EU-funded Initiative for the development and validation of aeronautical technologies that will improve environmental impact and enhance the European aerospace SupplyChain. Gian Piero Cutillo, Managing Director of LeonardoHelicopters, stated: “Building on our established expertise in the tiltrotor domain, bringing this Technology Demonstrator to the air for the first time sets a major milestone on our path to provide a key contribution towards an even more advanced, effective and sustainable use of rotorcraft technologies in Europe.
Vertical lift continues to provide invaluable advantages to operators and communities for multiple tasks globally, therefore we’re committed to developing and providing solutions that allow to uniquely combine the best of both worlds – rotary and fix wing architectures – allowing to access all-new capabilities.” Axel Krein, Clean Aviation JU’s Executive Director, stated: “The NGCTR shows how Europe can turn ambition and vision into impact: the programme brought together more than 85 organisations from 15 countries with a common goal: to develop faster and more sustainable rotorcraft based on tilt-rotor architecture.
With €116 million in EU funding across over 30 grant agreements, final outcomes go far beyond the project itself: more than 20 patents originated in the NGCTR, and the programme has helped drive skills development, industrial capabilities and new European supply chains. This makes the NGCTR launched under Clean Aviation’s predecessor Clean Sky 2 – a key contributor to strengthening Europe’s strategic leadership in sustainable air transport.”
