Brazil develops traffic system to lead the
flying car market
Common parts in science fiction films and cartoons, flying cars
are becoming closer to reality, and Brazil wants to lead the development of
this segment in the world, according to executives from Embraer's Atech
subsidiary, present at the 12th LAAD Defense & Security.
At a press conference at the most important defence and security
trade show in Latin America, held in the begging of April in Rio de Janeiro,
representatives of the company revealed details involving eVTOL.
"We are already anticipating, preparing a vision and a
concept of how we will be able to see the future of the future. Will be the air
traffic in that period. This is what our project will be", stated Marcos
Resende, director of technology at Atech.
Embraer's flying car, eVTOL is being developed by another segment
of the Brazilian company, Embraer X, and has had its first sketches shown
earlier this year at the South By Southwest (SXSW) innovation festival in the
United States. By the concept disclosed, the vehicle will be similar to a helicopter,
powered by electricity and will have vertical takeoff and landing.
"Aircraft are being developed now, they are still being
prototyped, and then comes a series of certifications and that's where that
demand comes in. We want to be ready, with a ready-made air traffic
system" , Resende added.
"In Brazil, specifically, there are large metropolises with
very great potential to develop urban mobility solutions discussed, such as São
Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, which have traffic problems, bottlenecks, and with a
great potential for it to develop here", explained Atech's president Edson
Mallaco Mr Mallaco
"There are already some prototypes of this type of aircraft
flying in the world, in tests not yet certified, including some with people on
board already, flying almost like a drone, carrying people, but this is still a
long way from what we imagine as a certified, safe aircraft, and also a control
system that coordinates that airspace to allow all that flow and transform
these aircraft. There are many vectors that will be circulating in this
environment and that somehow need to be coordinated", the Atech executive
added.
According
to business development director David Rottblatt, Embraer X also began
conversations with more than five Asia-Pacific regulators, starting with
Singapore, late last year to better understand the UAM environment and
expectations of the region.
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