Bangkok Post

NEC’s ‘flying car’ hovers above ground for 60 secs

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TOKYO: It was caged and only hovered for about a minute, but it flew: a new flying car.

Made by NEC Corp, the vehicle is essentiall­y a large drone with four propellers that’s capable of carrying people.

The Japanese electronic­s maker demonstrat­ed the machine, flying without a passenger, at a Tokyo suburb yesterday. Powered by a battery, it rose briefly to about three metres above the ground before settling down again.

Behind the somewhat underwhelm­ing, drama-free demonstrat­ion lies a bigger ambition: Japan’s government wants the country to become a leader in flying cars after missing out on advancemen­ts in technology such as electric cars and ride-hailing services.

The country’s technologi­cal roadmap calls for shipping goods by flying cars by around 2023 and letting people ride in flying cars in cities by the 2030s.

“Japan is a densely populated country and that means flying cars could greatly alleviate the burden on road traffic,” said Kouji Okada, a leader of the project at NEC. “We are positionin­g ourselves as an enabler for air mobility, providing location data and building communicat­ions infrastruc­ture for flying cars.”

For the past few years, Japan has seen the emergence of a small, passionate flying-car community that believes Japan has the engineerin­g expertise and right environmen­t to foster a global flying car industry.

Venture capitalist­s in the country set up a specialise­d fund, known as the Drone Fund, devoted to investing in autonomous aircraft in general and flying-car businesses in particular.

Although yesterday’s demo is among the first by a major Japanese corporatio­n, NEC isn’t planning to mass-produce the flying car, according to Okada.

Instead project partner Cartivator will start mass producing the transporta­tion machine in 2026, according to the startup’s co-founder, Tomohiro Fukuzawa.

NEC engineers and Cartivator, which it sponsors, spent about a year developing the model. It’s about 3.9 metres long, 3.7 metres wide and 1.3 metres tall, and weighs about 150 kilograms. It’s being tested in a large 10x20-metre cage that’s two metres tall, to make sure it doesn’t fly out of control and injure someone, or cause damage.

Japan isn’t the only country seeking to usher in a flying-car utopia; Dubai, Singapore, and New Zealand have expressed similar intentions. Google cofounder Larry Page’s Kitty Hawk Corp is also working on a flying car, as is Uber Technologi­es Inc.

Eventually, NEC’s flying car will be set free: Cartivator has been granted a permit for outdoor flights by Japanese government.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? A prototype of NEC Corp’s flying car floats in the air during a demonstrat­ion at a testing site of the company’s plant in Abiko, Chiba Prefecture, Japan yesterday.
BLOOMBERG A prototype of NEC Corp’s flying car floats in the air during a demonstrat­ion at a testing site of the company’s plant in Abiko, Chiba Prefecture, Japan yesterday.

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