I’m a big fan of airships. A Zeppelin NT LZ N07-101, better known as The Goodyear Blimp, was the subject for last year’s Autocar Christmas road test, and it was joyful. There’s a terrific museum in Friedrichshafen, Germany, dedicated to early Zeppelins and their ilk, and the luxury they offered was palpable. So it's great to see them back in the news.

Flying some 300 metres above the ground, you get a sensational view of the landscape. It’s eerily quiet, and in breezes the airship rocks gently like a cradle. It’s an incredibly soothing way to travel – just not a very fast one.

Last week, Bedfordshire-based Hybrid Air Vehicles (HAV), which makes the huge Airlander 10 airship, proposed a new passenger cabin layout for its craft, with seating for up to 100 people. That’s rather more than the latest Zeppelin’s 14.

HAV has proposed a number of fairly short-haul city hops for its airship, which are currently served by conventional jet aeroplanes. HAV thinks its airship is ideal for the job, because it could reduce the amount of CO2 emitted per passenger by 90%.

That might be true. But let’s come back to the whole speed thing. The Airlander has been tested at around 50 knots (57mph), a similar speed to the Zeppelin NT, although the regular cruising speed tends to be slower to cut fuel use. Either way, it’s quite a lot slower than a jet aircraft.

It’s also slower than a car, which is why the routes that HAV has suggested (such as Barcelona to Palma and Liverpool to Belfast) all include objects such as water and hills to make life complicated for drivers. You would just drive or take a bus if it were possible, but you instead have to fly or board a boat at the moment, and an airship is nominally quicker than one of those. Not totally straightforward, though.

Travel on a regular jet flight and you will be in a noisy and cramped aluminium tube, sure. But it can move at more than 500mph, so even if there’s a 50mph headwind, you will still cross the ground at 450mph.

2 Cabin interior