The Phnom Penh Post

Geely to take stake in flying taxi joint venture with Germany’s Volocopter

- Jing Shuiyu

ZHEJIANG Geely Holding Group will invest in German flying taxi company Volocopter, and set up a joint venture with the start-up to launch air taxis in China, the company said on Monday.

Geely led a round of investment that raised € 50 million ($ 55 million) to help t he VoloCit y aircraft wit h its commercia l launch wit hin t he next t hree years, the company said in a statement on Monday. Geely will ta ke a 10 per cent sta ke in t he flying-car developer, it said.

Geely Holding chairman Li Shufu said Geely has been “transition­ing from being an automotive manufactur­er to a mobility technology group”.

Li said the planned joint venture with Volocopter “underlines our confidence in Volocopter air taxis as the next ambitious step in our wider expansion in both electrific­ation and new mobility services”.

Volocopter CEO Florian Reuter said urban mobility needs to evolve in the next few years to meet rising demand. This new round of funding can help the company “take great strides” toward bringing airborne cars to life, he said.

The first closing will increase the total capital that Volocopter has received to € 85 million.

Volocopter is also in discussion­s with investors to raise more funds by the end of this year, according to the statement.

The flying-vehicle developer will put the funds toward receiving commercial certificat­ion by the EU Aviation Safety Agency for its VoloCity aircraft, the statement said.

Volocopter is among a host of companies tapping into the rising demand for flying vehicles. Since its foundation in 2011, Volocopter has built three generation­s of Volocopter aircraft, two of which received licences for manned and unmanned flight with a total funding of € 35 million.

The company has performed a number of public demonstrat­ions of the viability of electrical­ly powered vertical takeoff and landing aircraft. Most recently it successful­ly completed a flight at Helsinki Airport.

After the Series C funding round, Geely will become a minority investor in Volocopter, next to existing strategic investors like Daimler AG. Volocopter’s founders will remain the company’s largest shareholde­r.

Daimler AG management board chairman Ola Kallenius said: “We are delighted to see our partners at Geely investing into Volocopter and becoming shareholde­rs as we have been since 2017.”

Other companies in the US and Japan, such as Uber Technologi­es Inc, Boeing Co, Airbus SE and a Toyota Motor Corpbacked start-up, are also developing airborne vehicles and trying to commercial­ise them in the near future.

 ?? XINHUA NEWS AGENCY ?? A Geely Automobile Holdings Ltd research and developmen­t centre in Ningbo city in China’s Zhejiang province.
XINHUA NEWS AGENCY A Geely Automobile Holdings Ltd research and developmen­t centre in Ningbo city in China’s Zhejiang province.

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