Mobility
Revolution
- February 7, 2020, 8:00 PM
Electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL)
aircraft and the new urban air mobility (UAM) business model that they are
designed to support have the potential to make a lot of people very happy.
Passengers stand to benefit from gridlock-busting alternatives to being trapped
in ever-worsening road traffic. Investors expect to be rewarded for their faith
in the pioneering startups driving new products to market. And those with
mounting concerns about aviation’s environmental impact see the electric
aviation revolution as a prime opportunity for the industry to get more
sustainable.
Last year, Nexa Advisors and the Vertical Flight Society published a forecast
that the UAM market across 74 cities worldwide will be worth around $318
billion between 2020 and 2040. The study estimated that as many as 1.3 billion
passengers could be carried in and around these cities in that 20-year period,
generating demand for 28,000 eVTOL aircraft. Spending on infrastructure alone
(ground facilities and air traffic management) was estimated at $32 billion.
By the same token, the optimism surrounding
this much-hyped new sector of aviation often seems ill-founded to seasoned
industry watchers. The pioneers face multiple challenges to viably deliver the
scale of change they promise, and the next three or four years seem likely to
make a mockery of some of the more inflated claims and unrealistically
ambitious timeframes for delivery.
According to some assessments, there could
be as many as 200 new eVTOL and electrically powered fixed-wing aircraft in the
works worldwide. Some of these are intended to be operated autonomously,
although most will at least begin operations with a pilot on board. It’s a
safe bet that many of these will never feel the wind beneath their rotors, but
it’s hard not to be impressed by the energy, imagination and, yes, vast amounts
of cash, that are fueling the dream.
Wisk
ASIA-PACIFIC EARLY ADOPTERS
The Asia-Pacific region is fast emerging as
a key source of momentum for this exciting new sector. Several cities in the
region are expected to be early adopters of urban air mobility and a number of
leading companies in this part of the world are among providing significant
financial backing for eVTOL programs.
Here in Singapore, back in October 2019,
Germany’s Volocopter and the UK’s Skyport unveiled a mockup of the VoloPort in
the city’s Marina Bay district. With the agreement of the Civil Aviation
Authority of Singapore (Chalet C512), they also conducted a short demonstration
flight with the prototype of the VoloCity aircraft, which Volocopter says will
achieve European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) type certification in time
for service entry by the end of 2022.
In September 2019, Chinese automobile group
Geely announced an investment of around $55 million in Volocopter and signaled
its intention to bring UAM operations to China. Geely, which also owns a stake
in German carmaker Daimler, is in discussions to mass-produce the VoloCity and
bring down the cost of operating it.
Joby Aviation’s S4 eVTOL
Geely is not the only Asian automobile group
making a big move into electric aviation. In recent months, South Korea’s
Hyundai and Japan’s Toyota have each made
significant investments in the fast-emerging eVTOL sector.
At the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in
January, Hyundai Motor Company and Uber announced plans to work together to
develop a new eVTOL aircraft to be used for the planned Uber Air air-taxi
service. Rideshare giant Uber now has eight prospective manufacturing partners,
which also include Boeing, Embraer (Chalet CD37), Bell (Chalet Q01), Pipistrel
Aircraft, as well as three start-ups: Karem Aircraft, Joby Aviation, and Jaunt
Air Mobility. It has identified Melbourne in Australia as a possible early
adoption city for eVTOL flights.
Hyundai’s planned all-electric S-A1 aircraft
is projected to offer range of 60 miles, speeds of up to 180 mph and a cruising
altitude of between 1,000 and 2,000 feet. The aircraft, which features four
sets of rotors for vertical lift and four propellers for cruise flight, will
seat four passengers. Hyundai says the aircraft’s batteries will need between
five and seven minutes to recharge.
Also last month, Toyota Motor Corp. was
announced as the lead investor in a $590 million Series C financing round for
Joby Aviation. The Japanese company has invested $394 million in the
California-based start-up and will provide manufacturing and quality control
support of its S4 eVTOL, which Joby says will be ready to enter service in
2023.
Chaparral
The all-electric S4 features six sets of
propellers—four mounted on the wings and two aft—with a cabin optimized for
ridesharing operations. Capable of reaching a speed of 200 mph, it will have a
range of 150 miles on a single charge.
Meanwhile, in late December, China’s EHang
raised around $46 million in an initial public offering on New York’s Nasdaq
Global Market. This was a bit less than half the $100 million the company
had targeted from the IPO, but the new cash will boost efforts to complete the
development of EHang’s all-electric, autonomous 216 and 116 aircraft.
CityAirbus
Takeoff in China
In 2019, with the approval of the Civil
Aviation Administration of China (CAAC), EHang began some demonstration flights
in its home city of Guangzhou and various other locations in China. It has also
conducted demonstration flights in the Netherlands, North Carolina, and
Austria, where its Chinese-owned partner FACC is based.
In February, it filed an application with
CAAC for operations in support of a customer’s logistics business under the
Pilot Operations Rules (Interim) for Specific Unmanned Aircraft. The company
also holds an unmanned aircraft system (UAS) safety certificate from the China
Academy of Civil Aviation Science and Technology (CAST). The level II
certificate vouches for the safe performance of the 216 and EHang’s Falcon
drone in a UAS ‘fence’ in Guangzhou that the company has developed to avoid
autonomous aircraft from operating in restricted areas.
The 216 can carry a payload of 485 pounds on
flights of up to 22 miles and at speeds of up to 81 mph. Its single-seat sister
aircraft, the 116, has the same range and speed limits.
Bell Nexus
The company has not yet published dates for
anticipated type certification of its first two autonomous aircraft, but it has
already started making deliveries to various partner companies who are expected
to act as distributors. It claims to hold “orders” for around 1,000 aircraft.
The eVTOL sector has also attracted more
established aerospace players. Several of these are at the Singapore Air Show
this week.
In December, Boeing (Chalet WN93) formalized
an existing partnership with eVTOL start-up Kitty Hawk by creating a new joint
venture called Wisk. The new company will focus on bringing Kitty Hawk’s
two-seat, electric Cora aircraft, which has now completed more than 1,000 test
flights in New Zealand, where California-based Wisk has taken over Kitty Hawk’s
Zephyr Airworks subsidiary.
Boeing has not disclosed the size of its
financial investment in Wisk, but it appears to be the majority partner. Gary
Gysin, formerly president and CEO of Boeing autonomous marine vehicle
subsidiary Liquid Robotics, is head of the joint venture. In addition to Kitty
Hawk founder and CEO Sebastian Thrun, Wisk’s board of directors includes Boeing
NeXt vice president and general manager Steve Nordlund and Boeing Horizon X
vice president Logan Jones.
Gysin told AIN that New
Zealand will continue to be the hub for development work on the Cora, which is
being designed to operate autonomously. Wisk has an established cooperation
with Air New Zealand and is building on Kitty Hawk’s outreach work to the
country’s aviation and civic authorities. It expects to see the first
passenger-carrying flights conducted there and in October 2019 New Zealand
officials announced plans for airspace integration trials with unmanned
aircraft. Cora is expected to provide a range of up to 60 miles and is being
specifically developed for UAM applications.
Wisk is just part of Boeing’s wider
involvement in this sector. Through its Aurora Flight Sciences subsidiary, the
aerospace giant is working on a larger Passenger Air Vehicle eVTOL, which is
expected to resume test flights this year (after an interruption following a
crash in June 2019).
Meanwhile, the Boeing NeXt team is
developing an autonomous Cargo Air Vehicle intended for freight deliveries. In
October 2019, the company announced a partnership with German sports car maker
Porsche to work on new designs for a luxury eVTOL model.
Nordlund told AIN that
Boeing views “the future mobility space” as a big, long-term project that
requires the development of a sophisticated eco-system, of which aircraft are
only one part. “It takes a very broad approach and is a very long journey,” he
explained. “They [the Passenger Air Vehicle and Cargo Air Vehicle] are at the
research and development stage and provide great platforms for technology
maturation. Cora is a very mature vehicle, and, although there is still work to
do, our goal is to make this part of our portfolio. Boeing’s exact role will be
defined over time. The issue now is solving passengers’ problems and it is
still to be defined what the end products will look like. None of the vehicles
underway today have hit all the requirements.”
Quizzed as to whether the Boeing group’s
wider financial and business challenges might reduce its appetite for investing
in the new UAM sector, Nordlund gave no reason to believe this would shift its
focus. “We’re looking to provide the safest solution,” he said. “Speed to
market is irrelevant to us and we try not to talk about timelines and dates.
Boeing has paralleled this history of aviation and we will be there.”
Last year, Boeing and Safran (Chalet G18)
announced a joint investment in energy storage specialist Electric Power
Systems (EPS). The undisclosed investment during a Series A funding round has
boosted the Utah-based company’s efforts to develop a highly automated
industrial base capable of producing aviation-grade batteries at far higher
rates than is possible today. The aim is that this will reduce the cost of the
batteries, making them more viable for electric aircraft.
Boeing Passenger Air
Vehicle
France-based Safran is actively involved in
a number of electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) aircraft
developments, including Bell’s Nexus (see below), for which it is providing a
new turboshaft to support its hybrid-electric powerplant. It has also been
involved in Zunum’s ZA-10 fixed-wing program, which appears to be stalled due
to a lack of funds, and, reportedly with MetroSkyways’ City Hawk.
Safran views the eVTOL sector as a launchpad
for introducing electrical power to larger aircraft, and, in its view,
improving the efficiency of energy storage is a key factor in achieving this.
“We think that eVTOL is a significant business opportunity that still faces a
lot of uncertainty,” Hervé Blanc, vice president of the group’s Electrical
& Power division told AIN. “The eVTOL aircraft are perfect for
demonstrating the benefits of electric and hybrid power solutions and we expect
them to drive other opportunities with larger aircraft.
According to Safran, weight constraints for
energy storage units are a far greater challenge for aviation than they are in
the automotive sector. So too, are the ability to meet safety standards and to
produce large numbers of batteries at an acceptable cost. The company also is
working on algorithms to ensure that operators will know with a high degree of
accuracy how much charge is left in batteries so that they can be sure of
landing safely.
Safran also has invested in Oxis Energy,
which is developing new lithium-sulfur batteries. In July 2019, it acquired
Neelogy, a France-based specialist in electrical current sensors.
Further ahead, the group believes electrical
power will prove viable for regional airliners. At the Paris Air Show in June
2019, it announced a partnership with Daher and Airbus through which they will seek
to improve the aerodynamics of hybrid power solutions on larger aircraft
through development work on one of Daher’s TBM single-engine turboprop
aircraft.
Meanwhile, Embraer, which is in the process
of merging with Boeing, has its own ambitions in the UAM sector. In early
January, the Brazilian aircraft manufacturer’s EmbraerX division announced a
partnership with Elroy Air to develop a cargo-carrying eVTOL aircraft called
the Chaparral. The companies said the autonomously operated aircraft, which will
have a hybrid-electric propulsion system, will be able to deliver payloads of
up to 300 pounds over distances of up to 300 miles.
Elroy said it intends to complete type
aircraft certification in 2022 under the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration
(FAA)’s Special Class 21.17 (b) rules. According to the California-based
company, Embraer will be involved in the program in an advisory capacity “in
the areas of engineering, business, and certification.”
The Chaparral’s propulsion system consists
of a forward propeller and vertical flight rotors driven by electric motors,
with a turboshaft engine and electrical generator. “The system features unique
and patented cargo-handling systems enabling unattended pickup and drop-off of
cargo pods, which will unlock high-throughput logistics with very little
down-time compared to today’s air cargo [operations] in which assets are
utilized at lower daily levels,” Elroy co-founder and CEO David Merrill
told AIN.
EmbraerX president and CEO Antonio Campello
told AIN that Embraer’s experience in providing aftermarket
support once the Chaparral enters service could be very valuable and that it is
investing in developing an “ecosystem” to support eVTOL aircraft entering
service.
Separately, Campello said EmbraerX will
announce further new partnerships in the UAM sector during the first half of
this year. The company has been working on plans for a passenger-carrying eVTOL
aircraft but has steadfastly declined to say how advanced this program may be.
Campello declined to comment as to whether the future of these plans might
change once Embraer’s merger with Boeing is complete.
NO RUSH FOR EVTOL
Boeing’s rival Airbus (Chalet CD23-35)
shares its belief that success in the UAM sector requires a more gradual
approach than many of the eVTOL start-ups racing to be first to market. Two
separate Airbus group entities—the Silicon Valley-based A3 by
Airbus (known as A-cubed) advanced technology subsidiary and Airbus
Helicopters—are leading efforts to launch Airbus's entry to the eVTOL market
with a pair of technology demonstrators being used to define the planned
design. A3 was responsible for flight testing the single-seat Vahana model,
which concluded in 2019, and Airbus Helicopters is working on the four-seat
CityAirbus aircraft, which made its first flight in 2019. Neither of these
aircraft is intended to become production models, but the lessons learned from
the programs will guide Airbus’s plans for a passenger eVTOL that is now
understood to be at the early stages of product definition work that could be
complete by the end of 2020.
On October 2, 2019, Airbus Helicopters
signed a memorandum of understanding with EASA to cooperate in the field of
VTOL aircraft. The agreement will cover work such as the European
manufacturer's Racer demonstrator, the certification of new piloting assistance
systems such as Airbus's EAGLE technology, and thermal/electrical hybridization
of rotorcraft (including new eVTOL designs).
“Having lived and worked in Silicon Valley,
I’m well aware of the fail-safe-fail-cheap philosophy of many tech start-ups
there, but this approach doesn’t work when you are planning to fly people over
people,” Eduardo Dominguez-Puerta, Airbus’ senior v-p for urban mobility,
told AIN. “We have a strong safety brand and because of our track
record, the regulators know we are serious about this. So, we don’t want to
take a short-term approach.”
Airbus believes more progress is required to
establish a clear legal, environmental, and social policy foundation for
operating these aircraft in urban environments. Like Boeing, the European group
is committing significant resources to work with all stakeholders to resolve
these issues. It also sees significant challenges in terms of integrating the
new category of aviation into the air traffic management system and believes
that its in-house expertise in this area will give it an edge over new market
entrants with shallow aviation roots.
“One key difference between us and the
start-ups is that we don’t need to raise money from venture capitalists,” he commented.
“The people who have to do that tend to over-communicate what their plans are
and, in our view, some of the vehicles that come from this process will not be
optimal. They don’t have the chance to test different configurations and so
they have to take a chance on one configuration.”
Also, at last month’s CES show, Bell (Chalet
Q01) displayed a smaller version of its Nexus eVTOL aircraft, with four rotors
instead of six. The Nexus is designed for all-electric or hybrid-electric
power, but is “propulsion-agnostic,” according to Bell, “depending on customer
needs.” The four-rotor Nexus 4EX model will have initially a 60-mile electric
range, but that could be greater with hybrid-electric power.
The latest design is a tilting four-duct
vehicle configurable in an electric or hybrid-electric platform that features a
central wing, integrated landing skids, and a conventional vertical tail but
without a horizontal stabilizer. When announced at CES 2019 as a six-ducted
design, first flight for Nexus was projected in 2020, with aircraft
certification to follow in 2023. Bell has not yet provided an updated plan for
the 4EX, which is now the final configuration for the Nexus.
Bell also has unveiled what it calls its
AerOS urban air mobility operating system, which president and CEO Mitch Snyder
described a “smart city ecosystem.” The Bell demonstration at CES highlighted
how “mobility as a service” software like AerOS can manage a metropolitan
area’s UAM activities. Bell intends to offer AerOS, which runs on Microsoft’s
Azure platform, to cities to speed up their adoption of UAM capabilities.
The AerOS demo showed how the system takes
into account problems that inevitably come up during passenger and cargo flying
operations, for example, weather events that might require all vehicles to land
immediately. AerOS also creates an optimal flight schedule based on
goal-seeking optimization algorithms and artificial intelligence to anticipate
passenger behavior and desires and the vehicle’s needs for battery recharging
to meet the schedule.
Bell ArtOS
Last October, hybrid-electric propulsion
developer Ampaire (Chalet W87) announced a partnership with fellow U.S. company
Ikhana Aircraft to modify Twin Otter airframes to fly with that technology.
Ikhana is known for engineering modifications for Twin Otters, including having
received a supplemental type certificate for its DHC-6-300HG with a maximum
gross weight increase to 14,000 pounds, from 12,500 pounds.
The two companies have launched a
NASA-funded study to explore the “electrification” of the Twin Otter. Under
NASA’s Electric Aircraft Propulsion program, the two companies are evaluating
various options and produce plans to assess the cost, schedule and risk
mitigation for the planned development. The partners’ goal is to be able to put
a hybrid-electric version of Ikhana’s 19-seat RWMI DHC-6 300HG Twin Otter. The
1,500 hp/1 MW power specifications of the current aircraft’s Pratt &
Whitney Canada PT6 engines meet the criteria for the NASA program.
Since the partnership announcement,
California-based Ampaire has made no comment on progress with the prospective
Twin Otter re-engining program or its other plans to develop electrically
powered versions of other existing aircraft.
Ampaire’s first project has been to produce
a hybrid-electric version of the Cessna 337 Skymaster piston single called the
EEL. Hawaii-based operator Mokulele Airlines is supposed to begin flight trials
with the aircraft this year and reportedly has placed orders for the model.
The EEL aircraft first flew in June 2019 and
since then Ampaire has relocated its electric motor from the rear of the
aircraft to the front. Both aviation gasoline and electric motors are rated at
210hp (160 kW). The electric motor is throttled via software so that the stock
engine can keep up with it.
At the EAA AirVenture show in July 2019,
Ampaire announced plans to bring hybrid-electric power to the Cessna 208B Grand
Caravan and Viking Twin Otter, as well as offering a diesel-hybrid retrofit
option for piston-powered aircraft. Company CEO Kevin Noertker said his
company’s engine conversions cut fuel consumption by between 70 and 90 percent,
reduce maintenance expense by 20 to 50 percent, and produce significantly
quieter aircraft.
Two variants of the Twin Otter will be
offered: one with a 310-hp Continental IO-550 piston engine and a 215-hp
(160-kW) electric propulsion system and the other with a 300-hp Continental
CD-300 diesel engine and the same 215-hp electric system. Customers will have a
choice of selecting a pressurized or unpressurized cabin, as well as four or
six seats. Winglets and a STOL kit will be standard. Type certification is
expected in 2021.
SUPPLY CHAIN STEPS UP
The UAM and electric aircraft sector also
has attracted investment from across the aerospace supply chain. Several other
exhibitors here at the Singapore Air Show already have skin in the game.
In December, aircraft controls systems
specialist Moog (Chalet N87) completed its acquisition of Workhorse’s SureFly
eVTOL program for $4 million. Workhorse and Moog also have established a 50:50
joint venture to complete the development of the HorseFly unmanned cargo
delivery drone.
Moog has yet to publish a timeline for
completing the development of SureFly. In October, the HorseFly began trial
operations delivering medical supplies in San Diego, California, under a pilot
program approved by the FAA.
The hybrid SureFly is powered by a turbine
generator with battery backup and has eight props driven by electric motors. It
also has a whole-aircraft ballistic parachute for emergencies. In June 2018,
Workhorse said it applied to the FAA to begin the certification process for the
vehicle, which made a first flight earlier that year.
The HorseFly multicopter has a maximum
takeoff weight of just 30 pounds, a 10-pound payload capacity, and a
top speed of 50 mph.
Collins Aerospace (Chalet V01) is making a
major investment in its new electrical power development facility in Rockford,
Illinois. The Grid facility, which is due to be fully operational by 2022, will
harness expertise from across the group, including UTC Aerospace Systems, which
United Technologies merged with Rockwell Collins when it acquired the company.
The group is looking to harness its
extensive experience of systems integration capability as part of the “more
electric aircraft” trend to replace hydraulic systems with electrical systems.
Its engineers are engaged in research and development work with multiple
component suppliers to work out the best combinations of technology.
In Project 804, Collins is working with
Pratt & Whitney to develop a hybrid-electric propulsion system that
would be capable of powering a regional airliner. The team is preparing for a
2022 first flight by a re-engined Bombardier Dash 8 Q100 twin turboprop with a
2MW powerplant, consisting of a 1MW thermal engine and a 1MW motor controller
battery system.
“Power management is necessary for [electric
aircraft] engines to make them safe and manageable in flight,” said Stan
Kottke, Collins’ v-p for electrical power systems. “Following all the mergers
and acquisitions, we can move power all the way from the engine to the load
equipment of the aircraft.”
Collins says it is working with several
eVTOL aircraft developers but is not able to confirm which ones for now. It is
also expanding partnerships with battery specialists to explore applications
for new power storage technology.
Honeywell Aerospace (Chalet CS30) is to
supply Vertical Aerospace with fly-by-wire control systems for the planned
Seraph eVTOL aircraft that the UK manufacturer says will enter service by 2023.
Under a strategic-partnership agreement announced last July, Honeywell will
provide systems including triplex fly-by-wire computers for a third prototype
that is due to fly in 2020.
Seraph is expected to have room for around
four passengers and could have sufficient range to fly between cities. The
proof-of-concept model features four three-blade rotors.
Honeywell is expanding its involvement in
the emerging electric aircraft sector and is already partnered in at least
three other programs. These include Eviation Aircraft’s Alice (flight control
systems), the Pipistrel 801 (fly-by-wire control system, navigation systems,
and avionics displays) and Joint Air Mobility’s ROSA (avionics, navigation
systems, electric propulsion, and connectivity solutions).
Last November, the U.S. aerospace group
further advanced its ambitions in the UAM sector with an investment in
artificial intelligence specialist Daedalean. Honeywell is working with the
Swiss-based start-up to develop an AI-based system that will support autonomous
takeoff and landings, as well as a vision-based navigation and collision
avoidance capability for light fixed-wing and eVTOL aircraft that does not
depend on GPS.
BAE Systems (Chalet N74) is developing the
energy management system for Jaunt Air Mobility’s ROSA eVTOL aircraft. Under an
agreement signed in December, BAE's Controls and Avionics Solutions division is
handling this part of the program.
BAE Systems has 20-plus years of experience
in developing and integrating electric propulsion systems. The company has more
than 10,000 electric-hybrid systems on transit buses and marine vessels around
the globe, including major cities such as Paris, London, New York, and San
Francisco. The UK-based group also has more than 40 years of experience in controls
and avionics for military and commercial aircraft.
Last year, aircraft engine maker Rolls-Royce (Chalet N23) took steps to strengthen its ability to capitalize on the demand for electric aircraft. First, in June, it announced the planned (and now completed) acquisition of Siemens’s electric and hybrid-electric “eAircraft” business. Then, in July, it reached an agreement with the German state of Brandenburg to establish a new facility for developing and manufacturing hybrid-electric drive systems for aircraft.
The initiative aims to pioneer the
development of hybrid-electric 400 to 1,000 kW propulsion systems and builds on
Rolls-Royce’s existing cooperation with the Brandenburg Technical University
(BTU) in Cottbus-Senftenberg. The state of Brandenburg and Rolls-Royce
committed to co-fund the initiative over the next six years.
Airbus
Vahana
In December, Rolls-Royce unveiled the design of its first electric race plane under its ACCEL (Accelerating the Electrification of Flight) program. The company is looking to beat the world speed record for an electric aircraft by flying the aircraft at more than 300 miles per hour ahead of this summer’s Farnborough Air Show.
According to Rolls-Royce, ACCEL will have the most power-dense battery pack ever assembled for an aircraft, enabling it to fly 200 miles (London to Paris) on a single charge of its 6,000 cells. The propeller is driven by three electric motors delivering more than 500 hp. Rolls said that “even during the record run, the all-electric powertrain will deliver power with 90 percent energy efficiency and, of course, zero emissions.”
Rolls-Royce is also partnered with Airbus on
the E-Fan X technology demonstrator project and with Norwegian
airline Widerøe on a program that could replace its regional fleet of airliners
with electric aircraft by 2030.
Thales (Chalet F23) is partnered with Bell
in the development of its Nexus eVTOL aircraft, for which it is providing the
flight control system. The France-based group is also developing other
technologies for the UAM sector, including datalinks to allow aircraft to
communicate with each other, sense and avoid systems, cybersecurity
applications, and its Soarizon mission planning software.
Wisk,
which is an independent company with financial backing from Boeing and was once
a subsidiary of the Seattle aerospace giant, is far from the only eVTOL company
attempting to prove that the technology has a viable future. Joby Aviation,
another California-based startup, recently signed a deal with Uber to form an
"aerial ridesharing parternship" program, the details of which will
be clear to the public by 2023, the company hopes. An entire burgeoning
industry has formed in hopes of cashing in on this future industry, with a dash
to become first that at times can seem like a race to nowhere. With an MOU
signed, Wisk is betting that a small start will turn into real passengers
sooner, rather than later.
FLYING CARS INCH CLOSER TO REALITY AS NEW
ZEALAND SIGNS HISTORIC DEAL
The government of New Zealand has announced a formal agreement
with an American electrical take-off-and-landing (eVTOL) company called Wisk to
begin trials, which both hope will pave the way for regular commercial use.
Wisk's eVTOL, known as Cora, is a small self-flying vehicle meant to fly around
25 miles on a single charge.
"Wisk has been working with the Government and people of New
Zealand since 2017," said Gary Gysin, Wisk's CEO, in a press statement
earlier this week. "We are excited about what this agreement and trial
represents in our journey to bring safe everyday flight to everyone. New
Zealand values innovation, excellence and technology that is safe for people
and the environment. Being selected as the partner for this program is an honor
and testament to our hard work and steady progress."
From New Zealand's perspective, the "Government sees great
potential in the development of an innovative unmanned aircraft sector in New
Zealand and we are in a prime position to work with globally-leading companies
here to safely test and go-to-market," said Canterbury, Research, Science
and Innovation Minister Megan Woods, in a statement of her own.
"As well as the economic and social benefits the growth of
this industry offers, we also share Wisk's vision of a greener, emission-free
way for Kiwis and visitors to New Zealand to get around. Enabling the emergence
of an entirely electric air taxi service is a natural fit with New Zealand's
zero carbon goal by 2050."
Cora won't exactly provide mass transit. According to the Mountain
View, California-based company's website, a Cora can hold exactly two people.
But as a self-flying vehicle, neither of them need be a pilot. It's meant to
fly 1500 feet above ground, far lower than the 35,000 that is the common cruising
altitude of most commercial aircraft on the market today.
Rather than an airplane, a better comparison point for a Cora
might be helicopters, which tend to stay below 2,000 feet. But while helicopter
rotors can allow their vertical take off, a Cora achieves the same feat through
12 independent lift fans. It also travels slower than helicopters, moving
through the skies at around 100 miles per hour while a typical helicopter flies
at 160 MPH.
"We see this agreement as a sign of confidence in our product
and abilities to develop and deliver a safe and reliable air taxi service,
starting in New Zealand," Gysin added in his statement. With a Memorandum
of Understanding (MOU) between the comapny and the government signed,
preparations have now begun for the trials to start in New Zealand's Canturbury
region. No timetable for the tests has been given.
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