Kuwait Times

Cities vie to hop on Hyperloop rail

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LAS VEGAS: US startup Hyperloop One on Friday disclosed a list of locations around the world vying to put near-supersonic rail transit system to the test. The startup company keen to revolution­ize the way people and cargo travel said that 35 contenders remained from a field of 2,600 teams in a Hyperloop One Grand Challenge launched in May 2015.

Viable submission­s had to be condoned by government agencies that would likely be involved in regulating and, ideally, funding the futuristic rail. Projects in the running included hyperloop rail connecting Sydney and Melbourne; Shanghai and Hangzhou; Mumbai and Delhi, and London and Edinburgh.

There were also 11 US teams in contention. “There has been a lot of talk about reviving the infrastruc­ture in the United States,” Hyperloop One co-founder and engineerin­g president Josh Giegel told AFP at Consumer Electronic­s Show.

“If that is the plan, there is a good chance we would start working with them,” he said, referring to the incoming administra­tion of Donald Trump. Hyperloop One wants to get three systems underway, according to chief executive Rob Lloyd. “The end goal is to increase our pipeline of real projects,” said Hyperloop One senior vice president of global field operations Nick Earle.

Dubai late last year agreed to a deal to evaluate constructi­on of a hyperloop link that could slash travel times to Emirati capital Abu Dhabi to minutes.

The cash-flush city state, which has hosted other hi-tech transport pilots, said it would conduct a “feasibilit­y study” with Hyperloop One to sound out the scheme.

The company executives said that a hyperloop test system is being constructe­d in the desert outside of Las Vegas.

Hyperloop One had originally promised a full-scale demonstrat­ion by the end of 2016, after a successful test of the propulsion system.

“We are not only proving it will work, which we will do in the next few months, but we want to focus on cutting down cost and manufactur­ing time,” Lloyd said.

The startup’s reasons for being at the Consumer Electronic­s show included collaborat­ing with the selfdrivin­g car industry to make sure autonomous vehicles will interopera­te with the hyperloop system, loading themselves into pods to be whisked off to far-away destinatio­ns, according to Earle.

“A self-driving Uber would be able to go inside the hyperloop and come out the other side,” Earle said.

“It’s like broadband internet for transporta­tion” with self-driving vehicles carrying cargo or people in a real-world spin on data packets being taken quickly from one point to another over the internet, he maintained.

Hyperloop One, which has so far raised more than $160 million (145 million euros), was set on an idea laid out by billionair­e Elon Musk, the entreprene­ur behind electric car company Tesla and private space exploratio­n endeavor SpaceX. —AFP

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