The Prague Post - Companies envision taxis flying above jammed traffic

EUR -
AED 4.236238
AFN 76.131293
ALL 96.605497
AMD 440.026738
ANG 2.064832
AOA 1057.761908
ARS 1622.984804
AUD 1.778146
AWG 2.077746
AZN 1.962607
BAM 1.947279
BBD 2.323433
BDT 141.08141
BGN 1.955877
BHD 0.434957
BIF 3421.287885
BMD 1.153502
BND 1.504265
BOB 7.970844
BRL 6.14955
BSD 1.153552
BTN 102.090274
BWP 16.388715
BYN 3.938927
BYR 22608.6455
BZD 2.320057
CAD 1.620296
CDF 2566.542445
CHF 0.929258
CLF 0.027418
CLP 1075.583339
CNY 8.19911
CNH 8.208484
COP 4284.107622
CRC 576.952771
CUC 1.153502
CUP 30.567812
CVE 110.794128
CZK 24.17047
DJF 205.000182
DKK 7.468483
DOP 73.103235
DZD 150.678509
EGP 54.663286
ERN 17.302535
ETB 177.875608
FJD 2.639092
FKP 0.877247
GBP 0.883635
GEL 3.114679
GGP 0.877247
GHS 12.717356
GIP 0.877247
GMD 84.784762
GNF 10023.935103
GTQ 8.836333
GYD 241.245952
HKD 8.981717
HNL 30.279657
HRK 7.532721
HTG 151.00919
HUF 381.907379
IDR 19270.525132
ILS 3.779935
IMP 0.877247
INR 102.070594
IQD 1511.088041
IRR 48591.285728
ISK 146.794393
JEP 0.877247
JMD 185.331766
JOD 0.8178
JPY 181.047382
KES 149.955486
KGS 100.873789
KHR 4630.158142
KMF 492.545024
KPW 1038.172065
KRW 1692.003919
KWD 0.354644
KYD 0.96126
KZT 598.278618
LAK 25007.93043
LBP 103296.133115
LKR 355.593936
LRD 207.342248
LSL 19.852075
LTL 3.405992
LVL 0.697742
LYD 6.286838
MAD 10.707383
MDL 19.621457
MGA 5179.225673
MKD 61.508327
MMK 2421.543584
MNT 4118.759363
MOP 9.251893
MRU 45.93225
MUR 52.968974
MVR 17.775033
MWK 2003.065106
MXN 21.145889
MYR 4.787614
MZN 73.683044
NAD 19.851499
NGN 1673.893534
NIO 42.391223
NOK 11.74242
NPR 163.344837
NZD 2.055586
OMR 0.443569
PAB 1.153507
PEN 3.899418
PGK 4.877296
PHP 68.016296
PKR 323.742167
PLN 4.228912
PYG 8123.452109
QAR 4.199728
RON 5.087872
RSD 117.252842
RUB 92.91579
RWF 1672.578366
SAR 4.326002
SBD 9.494007
SCR 17.505702
SDG 693.833575
SEK 11.007878
SGD 1.506797
SHP 0.865425
SLE 26.963148
SLL 24188.364783
SOS 659.221998
SRD 44.498079
STD 23875.169142
STN 24.8003
SVC 10.093438
SYP 12754.301922
SZL 19.886396
THB 37.430969
TJS 10.653013
TMT 4.037258
TND 3.397645
TOP 2.777357
TRY 48.850474
TTD 7.82346
TWD 35.98258
TZS 2791.475887
UAH 48.560208
UGX 4216.548557
USD 1.153502
UYU 45.937189
UZS 13784.352923
VES 273.902944
VND 30425.930732
VUV 140.913348
WST 3.249364
XAF 653.076517
XAG 0.022243
XAU 0.000281
XCD 3.117398
XCG 2.079021
XDR 0.812863
XOF 652.309465
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.108743
ZAR 19.824858
ZMK 10382.907737
ZMW 26.214265
ZWL 371.427277
  • RBGPF

    -0.1300

    77.09

    -0.17%

  • SCS

    0.0700

    15.73

    +0.45%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1400

    13.96

    -1%

  • NGG

    -1.4400

    76.09

    -1.89%

  • CMSC

    0.0800

    23.67

    +0.34%

  • RIO

    -0.3100

    69.43

    -0.45%

  • BCC

    1.1500

    67.22

    +1.71%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.25

    -0.15%

  • RELX

    -0.4700

    39.8

    -1.18%

  • VOD

    -0.2400

    12.01

    -2%

  • CMSD

    -0.1170

    23.753

    -0.49%

  • BCE

    -0.2300

    22.79

    -1.01%

  • GSK

    -1.0300

    46.34

    -2.22%

  • BTI

    -0.1200

    54.74

    -0.22%

  • AZN

    -0.5600

    88.99

    -0.63%

  • BP

    -0.7400

    35.95

    -2.06%

Companies envision taxis flying above jammed traffic
Companies envision taxis flying above jammed traffic / Photo: Handout - Archer Aviation Inc./AFP

Companies envision taxis flying above jammed traffic

As urban traffic gets more miserable, entrepreneurs are looking to a future in which commuters hop into "air taxis" that whisk them over clogged roads.

Text size:

Companies such as Archer, Joby and Wisk are working on electric-powered aircraft that take off and land vertically like helicopters then propel forward like planes.

"'The Jetsons' is definitely a reference that people make a lot when trying to contextualize what we are doing," Archer Vice President Louise Bristow told AFP, referring to a 1960s animated comedy about a family living in a high-tech future.

"The easiest way to think about it is a flying car, but that's not what we're doing."

What Archer envisions is an age of aerial ride-sharing, an "Uber or Lyft of the skies," Bristow said.

Neighborhood parking garage rooftops or shopping mall lots could serve as departure or arrival pads for electric vertical take-off and landing (eVTOL) aircraft.

Commuters would make it the rest of the way however they wish, even synching trips with car rideshare services such as Uber which owns a stake in Santa Cruz, California-based Joby.

Joby executives said on a recent earnings call that its first production model aircraft should be in the skies later this year.

That comes despite a Joby prototype crashing early this year while being tested at speeds and altitudes far greater than it would have to handle as part of an air taxi fleet.

Joby has declined to discuss details of the remotely piloted aircraft's crash, which occurred in an uninhabited area, saying it is waiting for US aviation regulators to finish an investigation.

"We were at the end of the flight test expansion campaign at test points well above what we expect to see in normal operations," Joby executive chairman Paul Sciarra told analysts.

"I'm really excited about where we are right now; we have demonstrated the full performance of our aircraft."

Its eVTOL aircraft have a maximum range of 150 miles (241 kilometers), a top speed of 200 miles per hour and a "low noise profile" to avoid an annoying din, the company said.

Joby has announced partnerships with SK Telecom and the TMAP mobility platform in South Korea to provide emissions-free aerial ridesharing.

"By cooperating with Joby, TMAP will become a platform operator that can offer a seamless transportation service between the ground and the sky," TMAP chief executive Lee Jong Ho said in a release.

Joby has also announced a partnership with Japanese airline ANA to launch air taxi service in Japan.

And Toyota has additionally joined the alliance, with an aim to explore adding ground transportation to such a service there, Joby said.

- Rethinking required -

Hurdles on the path include establishing infrastructure and adapting attitudes to make air taxis a part of everyday life.

"For mass adoption, people need to have a mindset change," Bristow said.

"Getting people to want to travel in a different way will take some rethinking."

The need for the change, though, is clear, she reasoned.

Roads are congested with traffic that wastes time, frays nerves and spews pollution.

"There is nowhere else for traffic to go," Bristow said.

"You have to go up."

Miami and Los Angeles are already exploring the potential of aerial ridesharing, and Archer is hoping to have a small air taxi service operating in at least one of those cities by the end of 2024.

"It's a monumental task that we're taking on," Bristow said.

"It's going to take a while before the infrastructure supports the mass expansion of what we're trying to do."

Archer last month announced that it teamed with United Airlines to create an eVTOL advisory committee.

The US airline has pre-ordered 200 Archer aircraft with an eye toward using them for "last-mile" transportation from airports, Bristow told AFP.

"Imagine flying from London to Newark, New Jersey, then getting in an Archer and being deposited somewhere in Manhattan," Bristow said.

- More time for life -

Silicon Valley startup Xwing specializes in making standard aircraft capable of flying safely without pilots, with an aim of turning commuting by air into a cheaper and more efficient way to travel.

"We're strong believers here that the industry is going through a pretty dramatic transformation," Xwing chief and founder Marc Piette told AFP.

"In a few years you'll start seeing taxi networks of electric aircrafts regionally or on long hauls and it's going to be quite a different landscape."

Thousands of regional airports used mostly for recreation could become part of aerial commute networks, air mobility consultant Scott Drennan told AFP.

To Drennan, the primary reason for taking to the skies is to "give people back their time."

N.Kratochvil--TPP