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Sounding the Bell for a sustainable future in aviation

Bell now has an installed base of approximately 13,000 helicopters and offers a full suite of post-sales support and services, through a network of six Bell-operated service centers and 100 independent service centers.

Bell is known as a long-standing expert in the field of aviation, a pioneer responsible for many world firsts over its 87-year history, and at the forefront of its field as a provider of technology.

A designer and architect of superior solutions for vertical lift in the commercial and military sectors, with customers across six continents, Bell’s capabilities extend far beyond simply manufacturing. It invests heavily into continuous research and development of advanced, responsible technology, with the aim of benefitting its entire operations and stakeholders, most importantly, its customers – but also the planet.

The actions being taken to reduce the company’s carbon footprint are many and varied, adhering to differing timescales – these are being monitored and Bell is continuously looking for more efficient methods in its energy procurement and manufacturing processes. A major priority for Bell has always been the sustainment of its products – which benefits all stakeholders, including the one at the heart of its business: the customer. That customer can be the operator of a single platform or a nation’s defense force operating a substantial fleet. Whilst missions vary, platforms have one important element in common – they are designed and built with the aim of serving the longest of lifespans, with the most minimal and cost-effective sustainment.

Bell now has an installed base of approximately 13,000 helicopters and offers a full suite of post-sales support and services, through a network of six Bell-operated service centers and 100 independent service centers. These are located in 35 countries and offer everything from logistics support to pilot and maintenance training, customization, technical data, component repair and overhaul and more. Platforms are also built to be ‘upgradable’ – so that avionics can be modified from analogue to digital and so on. On this basis, Bell has had sustainability in its DNA from the beginning of the company’s inception.

The company is also exploring domestic production of aircraft in various strategic global locations – streamlining processes to become more cost, time and energy efficient, as well as investing in the countries in which it operates.

Aircraft operators too are concerned with reducing their carbon footprint, and so, along with exploring ways to diminish fuel consumption by developing electric, hydrogen and other propulsion systems that are sustainable, Bell has now integrated sustainable air fuel (SAF) into its demonstration and training fleet aircraft, and advises customers about its use and benefits. Meanwhile, Bell has been collaborating with Safran Aerospace and Avfuel around the adoption of SAF and has been undertaking rigorous testing to evaluate engine and aircraft performance data. In February of this year, a Bell 505 completed its first flight fueled solely by 100% Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) – the first-ever single engine helicopter to do it. Bell collaborated with Safran Helicopter Engines, Neste, GKN Aerospace and Virent Inc. to make this Bell 505 flight possible. It’s literally onwards and upwards from here.

Bell is a wholly owned subsidiary of Textron Inc., which has five operating segments all related to mobility. Together the group has pledged its commitment as a corporate citizen to reducing its global carbon footprint – as outlined in the Achieve 2025 Sustainability Goal program. By co-operating with its sister companies and knowledge sharing, Bell can maximize its effectiveness in reducing its shared environmental impacts, as well as increasing its access to emerging technology and economics.

The Achieve 2025 initiative is a five-year plan (which began in 2020) with the aim of reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 20 per cent and a 10 per cent reduction in each of the following: waste, water and energy. The plan represents part of the path towards the group’s overall sustainability goals. Bell’s Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) priorities also include the disclosure topics and metrics of Aerospace and Defense industry standards established by the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB), along with global environment, health and safety (EHS) policies and standards followed in every country Bell operates.

In addition, Bell’s 2021 Corporate Responsibility Report saw the inclusion of an index to map disclosures to the recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD), an important global advisory body that provides information to investors about the measures companies are undertaking to mitigate the risks of climate change. In January 2022 the TCFD was supported by over 3,000 organizations from 92 countries across the world.

The transparency that is provided to all stakeholders throughout Bell’s business provides a valuable benchmark in order to monitor its progress in achieving its environmental objectives.

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