Arab Times

Can Dubai ‘go green’ with sky taxis, pods?

Future transporta­tion

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DUBAI, Oct 17, (RTRS): With a bus stop only five minutes from her Dubai home, it is normally convenient for Deborah Irechukwu to travel to the city centre by public transport – except in summer.

The scorching temperatur­es – which can reach more than 40ºC (104ºF) – make even that short walk excruciati­ng, so when she has to run an errand the Nigerian native usually takes a taxi.

“It’s too hot outside. But today I didn’t have much (cash) on me, so I had to take the bus,” said Irechukwu, a teacher, wiping her face of sweat as she sat inside an air-conditione­d bus shelter one afternoon. “In Dubai it’s better if you’re driving.” With more than one vehicle for every two people – according to the Roads and Transport Authority (RTA) – Dubai has far more cars per person than other major cities like New York, Berlin and London. This contribute­s to the United Arab Emirates ranking among the 10 countries with the highest per capita carbon footprints, says World Bank data.

That is something authoritie­s are trying to change, with ambitious plans that in a few years could theoretica­lly see Irechukwu flying to the mall or being picked up by an electrical­ly powered, self-driving “room on wheels”.

From Singapore to Berlin, cities have been looking at new transport technologi­es to cut traffic and climate-warming emissions.

Having invested almost 100 billion dirhams ($27 billion) on infrastruc­ture including metro, tram and bus lines since 2005, Dubai is now experiment­ing with drone taxis and driverless transport pods that it hopes will entice people to leave their cars at home.

The technologi­cal push might only partially curb Dubai’s car dependency, but it has turned the city into a laboratory of future transporta­tion, according to transport experts.

“You could easily brand what’s happening in Dubai with those flashy trials as slightly gimmicky,” said Philipp Rode, who runs LSE Cities, a research centre at the London School of Economics. “This is not really trying to rethink the city at a systemic scale. But then, if you look in a bit more detail, there are interestin­g innovation­s,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Rode

Efficiency

Among those innovation­s are autonomous pods that aim to combine the comfort of ride-hailing services like Uber with the efficiency and capacity of buses, said Rode.

The cube-shaped vehicles built in Italy by California­based firm NEXT Future Transporta­tion can carry up to 10 people each and dock together when in motion, allowing passengers to move from one unit to the other as they travel.

The vehicles would pick up single users at home, then pool people going in the same direction inside one module, as other pods are released to collect more passengers.

“It’s like a relay race,” said inventor Tommaso Gecchelin, who co-founded the company.

With a top speed of 90 km per hour (56 miles per hour) and measuring 6.5 square metres (70 square feet) each, the pods look like “rooms on wheels”, he said in a phone interview.

They can also include bars, toilets and check-in facilities for people headed to the airport.

A fleet of 1,000 could help Dubai cut traffic congestion by up to 50%, by allowing people like Irechukwu to move around in affordable comfort all year round, Gecchelin estimated.

The company plans to start mass production by the end of next year and have at least four pods ready to ferry visitors within the Dubai 2020 Expo site, after it tested two prototypes in the city in 2018.

The pod trials come under the city’s plans to make a quarter of daily transporta­tion self-driven by 2030, which Dubai’s Roads and Transport Authority says could help significan­tly cut transporta­tion costs, road accidents and pollution.

RTA director general Mattar al-Tayer said the city has also been looking into self-driving cars, “sky pods” that run on suspended rails and flying taxis.

In 2017, the city launched its bid to become the world’s first city with a drone taxi service when an unmanned two-seater drone resembling a small helicopter cabin topped by a wide hoop studded with 18 propellers took its maiden flight within the emirate.

Vertically

Alexander Zosel, co-founder of Volocopter, the German company that built the sky cab, said 1,000 drones taking off and landing vertically from at least 30 ports across the city could move 10,000 people around per hour.

A ride in a flying cab would cost around the same as one that drives on the road, he added.

“We want to bring everybody to fly with (us),” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation over the phone. But full-scale developmen­t is still at least a decade away, he said.

Al-Tayer said the city was looking to have its first flying cabs airborne “in the near future”, adding Volocopter was among a number of operators the city was in talks with. Air taxis would cut traffic, emissions and the need for new parking space, he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in emailed comments.

They would help Dubai in its quest to become “the smartest city in the world” and increase the share of public transport journeys to almost a quarter of the total by 2025, up from 17% today, he added.

While autonomous cars and flying taxis might be the future of transport in Dubai, they will not work everywhere, said Rode of LSE Cities.

Some cities trying to reduce car usage might not want a proliferat­ion of privately-owned self-driving vehicles, which risk increasing traffic while they drive around empty, looking for parking or trying to pick up their owners, he said.

“Autonomous vehicles have to be based on shared mobility ... otherwise you risk replacing one inefficien­t mode of transport with another.”

And flying taxis could also cause undesirabl­e sideeffect­s, such as casting shadows all over the city and increasing wind flow and noise, Rode added.

Instead of looking at new ways to get people where they need to go, some places like Copenhagen and Singapore are trying to reduce the need for people to go anywhere at all, by bringing services like supermarke­ts and schools closer to their homes, he said.

But European and Asian cities have an advantage over Dubai in implementi­ng such changes, as Dubai’s expansion over the past 40 years has centered around driving, city planning experts say.

The city of 3.3 million, according to official figures, has about the same population as Madrid, but covers an area more than five times larger.

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