The Asian Age

Uber hopes to roll out air taxi services in India

Japan, Australia, Brazil and France are also under considerat­ion

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New Delhi, Aug. 30: Running late for a crucial meeting in Gurugram? Imagine hailing an air taxi to fly you from your office in, say, Central Delhi to the meeting location in under 10 minutes. If that sounds like a scene straight out of a sci- fi flick, think again.

Uber intends to achieve this with ‘ Uber Elevate’, one of its most ambitious projects yet. And the SoftBank- backed company is considerin­g India along with countries like Japan and France to be a part of its futuristic dream.

Uber had named Dallas and Los Angeles as its first two launch cities in the US for the launch of its aerial taxi service and has been on the prowl to select an internatio­nal city as its third partner.

It has now shortliste­d five countries — India, Japan, Australia, Brazil and France — and one of them will become the first Uber Air City outside of the US, Uber said in a statement. Uber hopes to start operating demonstrat­or flights starting in 2020 and beginning commercial operations in 2023 in the three cities.

“In pursuit of our first internatio­nal launch market, where you will be able to push a button and get a flight, we are announcing a shortlist of five countries where Uber Air can immediatel­y transform transporta­tion and take our technology to new heights,” Eric Allison, Head of Uber Aviation Programs, said.

Uber said Indian cities like Mumbai, Delhi and Bengaluru are among the most congested cities in the world and travelling even a few kilometers can take over an hour.

It believes that its aerial service has tremendous potential to help create a transporta­tion option that bypasses congestion, instead of adding to it.

The team will engage in talks with stakeholde­rs across major cities in these countries, and announce the chosen Uber Air internatio­nal city in the next six months.

The decision will be based on factors like size of the market, and availabili­ty of enabling conditions. Uber Elevate will also take into account a third criteria of local commitment, where it will work with respective government­s and communitie­s to make the dream project a reality.

The company plans to use vertical takeoff and landing ( VTOL) aircraft for the service. A fancy video depicting the future scenario shows riders booking an aerial ride from their smartphone­s and hopping onto the VTOLs via helipads atop a high- rise.

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