The National - News

Budget carrier AirAsia expects to start air taxi business next year as it diversifie­s

- SARMAD KHAN

AirAsia Group, parent company of one of Asia’s biggest budget airlines, plans to launch a flying taxi service as soon as next year as it looks to diversify its business amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“We are doing drones today and AirAsia is not far away from the air-taxi [business],” said chief executive Tony Fernandes during an online discussion at Malaysia’s Youth Economic Forum 2021. “We are working on that.”

The Kuala Lumpur-based company is about a year and a half away from starting air-taxi operations, which will likely be a quadcopter with four seats, he said.

“We have pilots, we understand propulsion, we understand navigating the skies, so we have a team working on that right now,” he said.

Air taxis have captured the interest of both investors and airlines, but the industry is at a nascent stage and it has yet to be seen if they can be mass produced to help reduce aviation industry emissions and ease congestion.

Technology start-ups and major companies such as Boeing, Hyundai, Airbus, Toyota and Uber are in a race to develop commercial­ly viable air taxis.

Last month, California electric aircraft developer Archer Aviation signed a $1 billion deal with United Airlines to supply it with 200 of its yet-tobe developed electric aircraft.

United estimates that Archer’s aircraft could help cut carbon dioxide emissions per passenger by 47 on a trip between Hollywood and Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport

– the route where Archer plans to launch an air taxi service by 2024.

AirAsia, which sold its India unit amid pandemic-driven challenges, is diversifyi­ng its business. It is set to launch e-hailing services in April and expects its drone delivery business to take off this year.

“You will be able to soon have a [drone] delivery to your home. I am hoping by the end of this year,” said Mr Fernandes.

Electric aircraft such as drones could account for 30 per cent of same-day package deliveries by 2040 as network scale dramatical­ly brings down costs, according to LEK Consulting. Mr Fernandes expects air travel to bounce back as nations across the globe conduct mass vaccinatio­n programmes.

“I hope interstate travel [within Malaysia] will start in the next two to three weeks,” he said. “We are hearing people who have been vaccinated will [be] allowed to fly.”

He said internatio­nal borders will probably begin to reopen in July or August this year.

 ??  ?? AirAsia Group chief executive Tony Fernandes
AirAsia Group chief executive Tony Fernandes

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