The Star Malaysia

Flying cars mooted for Paris’ public transport network

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PARIS: European aerospace giant Airbus and Paris undergroun­d operator RATP will study the viability of adding flying vehicles to the city’s urban transport network, the companies said.

The firms will “explore the feasibilit­y of urban air mobility services” in the French capital and the broader Ile de France region, they said.

“Airbus is developing demonstrat­ors of autonomous and unmanned technologi­es,” said the company’s chief executive Guillaume Faury.

“This is not science-fiction any more, It is fact. Today we have all the technical tools. But they have to be integrated into everyday life without jeopardisi­ng our priority, which is safety,” he added.

RATP is a good partner in such a project because of its knowledge of the associated needs and services,” said Faury.

Chief executive Catherine Guillouard of RATP, which manages Paris’ bus, train, and undergroun­d services, said mass transport remained the group’s core business, but it also sought “to develop new modes of transport and new services for the smart city of the future”.

“Flying cars are definitely coming within the next two to three years. The regulation is in place and authoritie­s are actively supporting the innovation,” AeroMobil said.

Levi Tillemann, author of the 2015 book: “The Great Race: The Global Quest For The Car Of The Future”, said safety was a major challenge.

“The only thing that really makes the idea of a flying car even remotely viable is a new generation of autonomous driving technologi­es that will reduce the likelihood of catastroph­ic failure.”

But he added that “from both a cost and energy consumptio­n standpoint, ground-based transit generally makes more sense”.

Flying car prototypes have become regular attraction­s at the annual VivaTech exhibition, which opened in Paris yesterday.

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