Bangkok Post

Uber wants to test network of flying taxis by 2020

- SOPHIE ESTIENNE

SAN FRANCISCO: Uber Technologi­es Inc said Tuesday that it wanted to launch a system of flying cars to move people around cities, with a goal of putting demonstrat­ion projects in place by 2020.

The ride-sharing giant announced a series of partnershi­ps to manufactur­e “vertical takeoff and landing” (VTOL) vehicles and put networks in place, a system dubbed Uber Elevate.

The partner cities working with Uber are Dubai and the Dallas-Fort Worth metropolis in Texas.

“The goal of these partnershi­ps is to develop a new on-demand VTOL network to enable customers in the future to push a button and get a high-speed flight in and around cities,” Uber said in a statement.

The announceme­nt came at a summit held in the Dallas area with partners in the project.

“What started as a simple question ‘why can’t I push a button and get a ride?’ has turned, for Uber, into a passionate pursuit of the pinnacle of urban mobility — the reduction of congestion and pollution from transporta­tion, giving people their time back, freeing up real estate dedicated to parking and providing access to mobility in all corners of a city,” said Uber chief product officer Jeff Holden.

“Urban aviation is a natural next step for Uber in this pursuit, which is why we are working to make push a button, get a flight a reality.”

Uber’s goal is to have the first demonstrat­ion network in place in Dubai for the 2020 World Expo in that city, and another pilot in Dallas the same year ahead of “full-scale operations” in the Texas region by 2023.

The announceme­nt came a day after Silicon Valley “flying car” startup Kitty Hawk, reportedly backed by Google cofounder Larry Page, released a video of its airborne prototype and announced plans for deliveries of a “personal flying machine” this year.

Uber’s plans appear more ambitious, and include partnershi­ps with US-based Bell Helicopter, Brazilian manufactur­er Embraer and Slovenia’s Pipistrel to produce flying machines for short distance urban operations.

“Uber Elevate network is an exciting opportunit­y for Bell Helicopter to help transform how cities move people and products in the future,” Bell president and chief executive Mitch Snyder said in a statement.

Embraer CEO Paulo Cesar de Souza e Silva praised the “unique opportunit­y to complement the air transport knowledge of a visionary and revolution­ary ground transport company.”

The Uber plan also includes partnershi­ps for “vertiports” for the flyers to take off and land, along with changing stations for the transporte­rs, which are expected to be mainly electric-powered.

Uber’s agreement with Dubai Roads and Transport Authority calls for a joint study into pricing models, people movement and determinin­g where routes should be created in the city.

“The partnershi­p will result in everything from hover and forward flight tests to actual flight operations in the Dubai area,” according to a joint statement.

Uber has grown into the world’s largest venture-backed startup, with a valuation estimated at some $68 billion despite ongoing obstacles with regulators and taxi operators.

In addition to ridesharin­g in some 80 countries, Uber is also testing self-driving cars in three US metro areas.

Uber’s growth so far has not been dented by a series of embarrassi­ng disclosure­s about a culture of sexism, cut-throat workplace tactics and covert use of law enforcemen­t-evading software.

 ?? UBER TECHNOLOGI­ES INC VIA REUTERS ?? Uber Elevate network facility is pictured in this handout illustrati­on.
UBER TECHNOLOGI­ES INC VIA REUTERS Uber Elevate network facility is pictured in this handout illustrati­on.

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