Oman Daily Observer

Solar Impulse 2 on final leg of world tour

The plane arrived in Cairo after a two-day flight from Spain, finishing the 3,745-km journey

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CAIRO: The first solar-powered plane to circle the world took off from Cairo on Sunday for Abu Dhabi, in the final leg of its journey.

Swiss pilot Bertrand Piccard was behind the controls of Solar Impulse 2, which can fly for days on only energy from the sun.

“It’s a project for energy, for a better world,” Piccard, 58, told journalist­s before taking off.

The ground crew, who had dragged the plane out to the tarmac with ropes, cheered as it lifted off and disappeare­d into the night.

It had been scheduled to leave last week, but the flight was delayed because of winds and Picard falling ill.

Piccard and Swiss entreprene­ur and pilot Andre Borschberg have taken turns flying the plane on its 35,000-kilometre trip around the world.

Borschberg piloted the flight’s 8,924 kilometre Pacific stage between Nagoya, in Japan, and Hawaii.

Solar Impulse 2 arrived in Cairo after a two-day flight from Spain, finishing the 3,745-kilometre journey with an average speed of 76.7 kilometres an hour.

It had earlier landed in Seville after completing the first solo transatlan­tic flight powered only by the sun.

The single-seat aircraft, no heavier than a car but with the wingspan of a Boeing 747, is fitted with 17,000 solar cells on its wings. During night-time flights it runs on batterysto­red power.

It typically travels at a mere 48 kilometres per hour, although its flight speed can double when exposed to full sunlight.

Piccard, a psychiatri­st who had made the first non-stop balloon flight around the world in 1999, said the last leg of the Solar Impulse 2 tour would be difficult.

“It’s a very, very hot region... its going to be an exhausting flight,” he said.

Borschberg told journalist­s that the heat would be a new challenge for the plane.

“Technicall­y it’s close to the limits that we have set in terms of temperatur­e, so that’s something which we did not experience before,” he said via Skype from mission control in Monaco. “But with the temperatur­e profile that we see over the coming days, we should be all fine.”

The plane set out on March 9, 2015 from Abu Dhabi, crossing Asia and the Pacific to reach the United States and then flying on to Spain and Egypt with the sun as its only source of power.

Prince Albert of Monaco, a patron of the project, gave the flight the go-ahead from its mission control centre in Monaco, telling Piccard “you are released to proceed.”

Borschberg and Piccard have said they want to raise awareness of renewable energy sources and technologi­es with their project, although they do not expect solar-powered commercial planes any time soon.

“There will be passengers very soon in electric airplanes that we will charge on the ground,” Piccard had said when the plane arrived in Cairo. BAGHDAD: At least six people were killed and 20 wounded in a bomb attack claimed by IS in a district of northwest Baghdad, police and medical sources said on Sunday.

Amaq, a news agency that supports IS, said a bomber wearing an explosive vest had targeted security forces at the entrance to the Khadimiya neighbourh­ood.

The ultra-hardline militants, who have been pushed off much of the territory they seized in northern and western Iraq in 2014, have stepped up attacks in the capital and other cities. The group said it was behind a suicide blast this month which left 292 people dead, one of the largest attacks of its kind since the US-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003. Sources in Kadhimiya hospital, where the victims of Sunday’s explosion were taken, said the death toll could rise as some of the wounded were in a critical condition.

 ?? — AFP ?? The Solar Impulse 2 aircraft prepares to take off from the Cairo Internatio­nal Airport in the Egyptian capital on Sunday.
— AFP The Solar Impulse 2 aircraft prepares to take off from the Cairo Internatio­nal Airport in the Egyptian capital on Sunday.

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