USA TODAY US Edition

Uber trying to elevate its ride game with flying cars

- Eli Blumenthal @eliblument­hal

While most of the auto industry is focused on getting self-driving cars rolling, Uber already has its eyes to the skies. Literally.

In a white paper published this week, the company detailed plans for Uber Elevate, its new unit for offering rides through flying cars. The company said it hopes to have the program up and running within a decade.

Uber stresses the many benefits of this method of transporta­tion in this new mode of transporta­tion, saving time being the biggest.

“Imagine traveling from San Francisco’s Marina (district) to work in downtown San Jose — a drive that would normally occupy the better part of two hours — in only 15 minutes,” writes Jeff Holden, Uber’s chief product officer, and Nikhil Goel, the company’s product manager for Uber Elevate and advanced programs, in the white paper.

“What if you could save nearly four hours round-trip between São Paulo’s city center and the suburbs in Campinas? Or imagine reducing your 90-plus-minute stop-and-go commute from Gurgaon to your office in central New Delhi to a mere six minutes,” they wrote.

Plus with more people in the air, the company anticipate­s it loosening the burden on the roads, particular­ly in heavily congested areas.

The company acknowledg­es that there are challenges for getting this project off the ground. As opposed to using helicopter­s, which are expensive and noisy, the company will instead be relying on VTOLs, or “a network of small, electric aircraft that take off and land vertically.”

The VTOLs are cheaper and quieter, and their electronic basis also means they will be better for the environmen­t than the gaspowered helicopter­s. Battery technology still needs to improve, and as these are flying vehicles, the company notes, there will need to be some air-traffic control mechanism in place. These vehicles also will need properly trained pilots at the controls, at least until they too become self-driving.

Plus there’s the economics. This type of flying aircraft, which is already being developed by a variety of companies including Joby Aviation, Zee.Aero and Airbus, will be pricey initially, though Uber anticipate­s that with scale it will drop. For the consumer, it sees prices starting out high but dropping over time due to its Uber Pool system.

A 45-mile pool VTOL, for example, would replace a 60-mile car ride for potentiall­y as low as $21. And the trek would be only 15 minutes.

The company is planning an Elevate Summit for early next year to further set the wheels in motion.

 ?? JOBY AVIATION ?? The Joby S2 is one of the many potential new VTOLs looking to make flying cars a reality.
JOBY AVIATION The Joby S2 is one of the many potential new VTOLs looking to make flying cars a reality.
 ?? UBER ?? This is Ubers Elevate concept for flying cars.
UBER This is Ubers Elevate concept for flying cars.

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