USA TODAY US Edition

‘WE MADE IT! WE MADE IT!’ SOLAR PLANE STICKS ITS LANDING

Impulse 2 completes final leg of record flight in Abu Dhabi

- Ryan W. Miller @MILLERdfil­lmore USA TODAY

The Solar Impulse 2 airplane touched down early Tuesday morning, completing its final leg of the first entirely solar-powered flight around the world.

The experiment­al airplane landed amid much fanfare in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates — the same city where the historic voyage began in March 2015.

Moments after landing, Swiss pilot Bertrand Piccard stuck his hand out of the cockpit, giving a thumbs up, and said: “We made it! We made it! All together, we did it!”

Piccard took off from Cairo early Sunday local time for the last leg of the journey that combines global circumnavi­gation and solar energy. He alternates duties with fellow Swiss pilot André Borschberg, who landed the plane in Cairo on July 13.

United Nations SecretaryG­eneral Ban Ki Moon on Monday joined a live-stream video call of the flight and encouraged Piccard during the pilot’s final leg.

“You are always welcome on our team,” Piccard told Ban from the cockpit. Musician Akon also called into the live stream to sup- port the mission.

During one stretch of the plane’s world tour using only energy from the sun, Borschberg completed the world’s longest non-stop solo flight last July — a four-day, 21-hour, 52-minute trip from Japan to Hawaii.

After that record-breaking flight, the damage it caused to the plane’s battery delayed the project until the plane resumed its flight in April. The aircraft then made multiple stops in the U.S., from San Francisco to Phoenix, then to Tulsa. Other stops included Dayton, Ohio; Allentown, Pa.; and New York City, before crossing the Atlantic to Spain in June.

The solar project began 14 years ago not only to advance aviation technology but also to raise awareness about climate change, both pilots have said.

“The most important thing isn’t to make world records,” Piccard said last year. “It’s to show what we can do with clean technologi­es.”

Bob Van der Linden, curator of aeronautic­s at the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n’s Air and Space Museum, recently said, “It was never intended to be a pioneering plane,” but instead a way to advance solar power technology.

 ?? KHALED DESOUKI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? The solarpower­ed Solar Impulse 2 aircraft prepares to take off from Cairo Internatio­nal Airport on Sunday as it heads to Abu Dhabi on the final leg of its world tour.
KHALED DESOUKI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES The solarpower­ed Solar Impulse 2 aircraft prepares to take off from Cairo Internatio­nal Airport on Sunday as it heads to Abu Dhabi on the final leg of its world tour.

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