China’s 18‑airship order isn’t a gimmick; it’s a serious move toward low‑altitude, low‑carbon aviation. Here’s how airships fit into the future of green transport.
China’s Airship Order Signals a Quiet Shift in Green Transport
Eighteen manned airships ordered in a single deal doesn’t sound like much next to the thousands of jets flying every day. But for low‑altitude, low‑carbon transport, it’s a big signal.
Zhejiang Airspace Integration Low-Altitude Industry Development Company has ordered 18 AS700 manned airships from Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC). For a niche sector like lighter‑than‑air aviation, that’s one of the largest modern purchases anywhere. And it fits neatly into a broader push: China wants to turn its “low-altitude economy” into a serious pillar of growth, tourism, and greener mobility.
This matters for anyone watching green technology, clean transport, or climate‑driven business models. Airships sit in an unusual sweet spot: they’re slow, but incredibly efficient; limited in speed, but flexible in use. When you add digital control systems and AI-enabled flight management, you get a surprisingly practical tool for low-carbon aviation.
In this article, I’ll break down why this airship deal matters, how airships actually fit into clean transport, and where the real business opportunities are—for operators, tech providers, and cities looking to cut emissions without killing mobility.
What China’s AS700 Airship Deal Really Means
China’s purchase of 18 AS700 manned airships is best understood as an infrastructure move for the low-altitude economy, not a one‑off novelty order.
A quick look at the AS700 and the deal
The AS700 is a manned, low‑altitude airship designed mainly for:
- Short‑range sightseeing and tourism
- Aerial patrols and observation
- Advertising and brand experiences
- Potential disaster response and logistics in hard‑to‑reach areas
While AVIC hasn’t pushed global marketing the way Western firms do, we can infer a lot from similar platforms:
- Cruise speeds are modest, typically 60–80 km/h
- Operating altitudes are low (usually under 3,000 m)
- Fuel use per passenger‑kilometer is far below that of helicopters or small planes
Ordering 18 units at once is unusual in this sector. Most modern airship projects struggle to move beyond prototypes and single‑digit fleet sizes. So what Zhejiang’s move signals is:
- Policy backing – You don’t commit to a fleet of airships unless regulators are leaning in. China has already flagged the “low-altitude economy” as a strategic focus area.
- Network intent – Eighteen airships can support a multi‑city or multi‑scenario network: tourism routes, patrol routes, and demonstration corridors.
- Industrial experiment – This is a live testbed for clean aviation tech, digital airspace management, and new business models, all under one program.
For the Green Technology series, this is a textbook example of how policy, hardware, and data systems converge to create cleaner, commercially viable transport.
Why Airships Belong in the Clean Transport Toolkit
Airships aren’t a silver bullet. But they solve a very specific problem: how to move people and sensors through the air with a tiny fraction of the emissions of conventional aircraft, especially over short distances and at low speeds.
Massive lift, very small energy bills
Here’s the core physics advantage: airships get most of their lift for free from buoyant gas (usually helium). Engines mainly provide propulsion and control, not brute‑force lift like a helicopter.
That has three big climate benefits:
- Lower energy use: Energy consumption per passenger‑kilometer can be several times lower than a helicopter on similar routes.
- Easier electrification: Because you’re not fighting gravity as hard, hybrid-electric or fully electric propulsion is more realistic, especially for low‑altitude, short‑range operations.
- Less noise and local pollution: Fewer and smaller engines mean quieter flights and less disturbance over cities and natural attractions.
Where airships actually make sense
Airships are slow. For business travelers bouncing between megacities, they’re a poor fit. But for specific use cases, they make a lot of sense:
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Tourism and sightseeing
Low-speed is an advantage here. Passengers want views and comfort, not speed. Airships can:- Offer panoramic aerial tours over lakes, coasts, and heritage sites
- Operate with much lower emissions than helicopters
- Create premium, high‑margin experiences for tourism operators
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Surveillance, inspection, and monitoring
Many tasks—pipeline monitoring, border patrol, forest fire watch—don’t need speed; they need endurance and stable platforms. Airships can:- Loiter over an area for hours with high‑resolution sensors
- Use hybrid-electric systems to stay aloft with limited emissions
- Stream data into AI analytics systems in real time
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Remote logistics and disaster support
In floods, earthquakes, or remote regions with weak infrastructure:- Airships can deliver supplies without runways
- They can stay overhead as communication relays or observation posts
- They put far less stress on fragile infrastructure than heavy rotary‑wing fleets
If you’re building a green transport strategy, the question isn’t “Are airships the future?” It’s “Where do airships outperform planes, drones, or trucks on cost, emissions, or reliability?” Those niches are where money will be made.
How AI and Digital Systems Make Low-Altitude Aviation Work
The low-altitude economy only scales if it stays safe and predictable. That’s where AI and digital green technology come in.
Managing crowded low skies
China isn’t just adding airships. It’s also rapidly deploying:
- Drones for logistics and inspection
- eVTOL prototypes for urban air mobility
- General aviation aircraft in regional corridors
All of these compete for the same low-altitude airspace below traditional commercial jets. To make this safe, operators are leaning on:
- AI-powered traffic management to predict conflicts and propose safe routes
- Real-time weather and air-quality analytics to pick optimal flight paths
- Automated separation and deconfliction between drones, airships, and small aircraft
For a fleet of AS700 airships, this means:
- Optimized routing that reduces energy consumption and delays
- Predictive maintenance alerts based on flight data
- Automated compliance with airspace rules, which is crucial as regulations tighten
Smarter, greener operations with data
If you’re an operator or city planner, the trick isn’t just buying green hardware. It’s using AI and analytics to squeeze emissions and costs down over time. With low-altitude fleets, you can:
- Analyze passenger load patterns to adjust schedules and avoid half‑empty flights
- Use predictive models to decide when to use airships versus buses or ferries
- Integrate renewable-powered ground infrastructure (solar-charged hangars, electric ground vehicles) into operations
I’ve found that the most successful clean transport projects treat every vehicle as a data node, not just a moving asset. Airships are no different. The greener—and more profitable—operations will belong to those who treat telemetry, AI, and optimization as core, not optional extras.
Business Models Behind Low-Altitude, Low-Carbon Aviation
Most companies get this wrong: they fixate on the vehicle and forget the business model. A fleet of airships won’t pay for itself just because it’s green.
Where the money can come from
For a program like Zhejiang’s, viable revenue streams might include:
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Tourism & experiences
- Premium sightseeing flights over scenic Zhejiang regions
- Corporate events, branded flights, and VIP experiences
- Eco-tourism packages that bundle low-carbon transport and low-impact lodging
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Data and services
- Contracted aerial surveys for utilities, agriculture, and construction
- Environmental monitoring (air quality, forest health, coastal erosion)
- Long‑endurance patrols for maritime, border, or wildfire agencies
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Public sector partnerships
- Disaster preparedness and response frameworks
- Integration into regional low-carbon mobility plans
- Education and public engagement on climate and technology
A healthy low-altitude ecosystem doesn’t rely on a single use case. It layers multiple revenue streams on the same assets, shifting each airship between roles as demand changes.
Where non-Chinese companies fit in
If you’re outside China, you don’t need an AS700 order to benefit from this trend. There are real opportunities in:
- Software and AI – traffic management, optimization, digital twins, maintenance analytics
- Sensors and payloads – cameras, LiDAR, environmental monitoring packages
- Green ground systems – electric charging, hangar energy systems, hydrogen or battery logistics
The Zhejiang-AVIC deal is a signal that a large market is forming for low-altitude, low‑carbon solutions. You don’t need to build the airship to participate—you can supply the intelligence and infrastructure around it.
What This Means for the Future of Green Technology
Here’s the thing about China’s low-altitude ambitions: they’re building a layered green mobility system, not just a fleet of cool vehicles.
- High‑speed rail takes the long corridors
- Urban transit covers dense cores
- Drones and eVTOLs target ultra-short urban hops
- Airships and light aircraft fill the scenic, remote, or endurance‑focused gap
That multi‑layered approach is where green technology really shines. When electric aviation, AI traffic management, renewable energy, and smart city planning work together, emissions come down without sacrificing access or growth.
For readers following this Green Technology series, the lesson is straightforward:
Green transport isn’t one big leap—it’s a series of targeted bets that fit specific use cases.
China’s order of 18 AS700 airships is one of those targeted bets. It’s not about replacing jets; it’s about owning the low skies with cleaner, smarter tools.
If you’re planning strategy for a city, a utility, a transport operator, or a tech company, ask:
- Where in your ecosystem do you need low-speed, low-altitude, low-emission capability?
- Which parts of your operation could move from fuel‑hungry helicopters or trucks to lighter‑than‑air, electric, or hybrid platforms?
- How can AI and data make these systems not just greener, but clearly more profitable?
The companies that start answering those questions now will be the ones supplying the systems, software, and services when more regions follow China into the low‑altitude economy.
Featured Image Prompt
A large, sleek modern airship cruising at low altitude over a green Chinese coastal cityscape at sunset, with rivers, parks, and high‑rises below, soft warm light, clear sky, professional realistic style, emphasizing clean technology and sustainable aviation.