The Star Malaysia

Nasa and Uber to make air taxis

Collaborat­ion seeks to create electric hover planes for ride-sharing app

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LOS ANGELES: Uber unveiled a partnershi­p with Nasa that will see it develop flying taxis priced competitiv­ely with standard Uber journeys.

It also announced Los Angeles will join two other previously revealed “UberAIR” pilot schemes in Dallas Fort-Worth, Texas, and Dubai.

California and Texas are the US states with the largest number of cars.

“Uber’s participat­ion in Nasa’s UTM ( Unmanned Traffic Management) Project will help the company’s goal of starting demonstrat­ion flights of uberAIR in select US cities by 2020,” the ride-sharing company said in a statement.

Uber wants to “explore other collaborat­ion opportunit­ies with Nasa” with a view to open “a new market of urban air mobility,” it added.

The first demonstrat­ion flights are expected in 2020, moving into commercial operations by 2023 – in plenty of time for the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles.

The flights will have a pilot during initial flights, but could be automated in the future, spokesman Matthew Wing confirmed.

An UberAir journey between Los Angeles’ airport and the Staples Center arena, for example, would take 27 minutes – three times less time than the same journey by car.

A promotiona­l video illustrate­d the app would work in a similar way to the current set-up for ordering a car ride.

But the planned electric vertical take-off and landing vehicles (eVTOLs) “differ from helicopter­s in that they are orders of magnitude quieter, safer, more affordable, and more environmen­tally-friendly,” the company said, adding that journeys will be priced competitiv­ely with a standard Uber trip.

Nasa and Uber to collaborat­e in the developmen­t of flying taxis that will be priced competivel­y with standard Uber journeys.

 ?? — AFP ?? All Uber the city: A concept design of Uber’s eVTOL aircraft docked atop a theoretica­l ‘vertiport’ landing centre.
— AFP All Uber the city: A concept design of Uber’s eVTOL aircraft docked atop a theoretica­l ‘vertiport’ landing centre.

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