Los Angeles Times

Hyperloop bets on China

L.A. transporta­tion company lands first deal to bring concept system to country.

- By Ethan Millman ethan.millman @latimes.com Twitter: @MillmanEth­an Bloomberg contribute­d to this report.

Los Angeles-based Hyperloop Transporta­tion Technologi­es announced this week that it would work with China to bring the hightech experiment­al transporta­tion service to that country.

Hyperloop technology is still a concept that’s under developmen­t, with no operationa­l hyperloop systems in place yet.

This is HTT’s third commercial agreement, according to the company, after Abu Dhabi and Ukraine signed on earlier in 2018.

Under China’s first hyperloop deal, HTT would bring the technology to Tongren, a city in China’s southern Guizhou province.

The project would be broken up into two phases.

The first would be an approximat­ely 6-mile route that HTT is estimating would cost about $300 million. Officials are still discussing a specific location, with the airport as a possible point in a potential route.

The second phase would be an expansion; HTT officials didn’t specify its length or cost.

Creating a hyperloop system for Tongren would give HTT the opportunit­y to develop its technology for a more mountainou­s area than it is tackling in Abu Dhabi or Ukraine.

“That’s one of the reasons we’re doing this project,” HTT Chief Executive Dirk Ahlborn said. “It will help us get a better grip on building a better system in a more challengin­g terrain. It’s something new for us.”

Ahlborn wouldn’t comment on a specific timeline for the project, but he said the company is estimating constructi­on would take two to three years for the first phase.

HTT said it would provide the technology and engineerin­g expertise and that Tongren would construct the hyperloop and handle certificat­ions.

Ahlborn said the U.S.China trade war has not affected the deal.

The deal is a public-private partnershi­p, with the state paying half the costs and private Chinese investors much of the rest, the company said.

HTT wasn’t the only Los Angeles hyperloop company to announce a China deal this week.

Genertec America Inc., a subsidiary of a Chinese state-owned entity, pledged $1 billion for a future hyperloop project from Los Angeles start-up Arrivo.

 ?? Anne Cusack Los Angeles Times ?? CO-FOUNDERS Bibop Gresta, left, and Dirk Ahlborn hope to bring Hyperloop Transporta­tion Technologi­es’ experiment­al transporta­tion service to China. The company envisions capsules shuttling people in tubes.
Anne Cusack Los Angeles Times CO-FOUNDERS Bibop Gresta, left, and Dirk Ahlborn hope to bring Hyperloop Transporta­tion Technologi­es’ experiment­al transporta­tion service to China. The company envisions capsules shuttling people in tubes.

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