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01 / 05
Solar-Powered Planes Take Flight

Wall Street Journal | Air Transport

Solar-Powered Planes Take Flight

“Imagine airplanes powered only by energy from the sun, some so light they can be launched from the ground by hand, others gathered in giant ‘parking lots’ in the stratosphere. 

Those are the types of aircraft being developed now that are bringing the dream of solar- powered flight closer to reality, with planes that act very differently from the jetliners of today. 

Solar-powered planes won’t be flying people to their next vacation spot anytime soon. But these prototypes, most of which operate without humans, could lead to new alternatives for aerial surveillance on high-risk missions and emergency telecommunications in disaster zones, industry executives say. Aviation giants, telecommunication companies, venture investors and military agencies are already spending millions of dollars developing the planes and their technologies.”

From Wall Street Journal.

New York Times | Air Transport

Drones Will Do Some Schlepping for Sherpas on Mount Everest

“Help may at last be on the way for the Nepali Sherpas who carry heavy loads for foreign climbers through treacherous sections of the world’s tallest peak.

When the main climbing season begins next month on Mount Everest, expedition companies will test drones that can ferry loads as heavy as 35 pounds in the high altitudes, bring back ladders used to set the climbing routes, and remove waste that is typically left behind.

Goods that would normally take seven hours to be transported by foot from Everest’s base camp to Camp I can be airlifted within 15 minutes. By lightening the Sherpas’ burdens, drone operators hope that the chances of fatal accidents — which have risen as climate change has accelerated snowmelt — can now be reduced.”

From New York Times.

CNN | Infrastructure & Transportation

Vast Undersea Tunnel Will Change the Road and Rail Map of Europe

“On the shores of the Baltic Sea, in the south of Denmark, a vast engineering marvel is taking shape — piece by giant concrete piece — that, when finished, will drastically redraw the road and rail maps of Europe.

The Fehmarnbelt tunnel may not have grabbed the popular imagination in the same way as the Channel Tunnel between Britain and France did more than 30 years ago, but this structure is just as impressive, if not more so.

Linking Denmark and Germany, the Fehmarnbelt will carry two-lane road highways under the water in both directions, plus two electrified rail lines — a multiple tube thoroughfare that will plunge beneath the waves of one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes.

At 18 kilometers (11.2 miles), it’s nowhere near as long as the 50-kilometer (31-mile) Channel Tunnel, but in many other ways it’s bigger. The project will, in fact, be the world’s longest road and rail tunnel, and the world’s longest immersed tunnel.”

From CNN.

ZEcar | Motor Vehicles

BYD’s 5-Minute 400km EV Charging Breakthrough

“BYD has unveiled its groundbreaking Super e-Platform, setting a new global benchmark for EV technology. The platform boasts 1,000 kW ultra-fast charging (1 MW), enabling 400 km (249 miles) of range in just 5 minutes – twice the speed of Tesla’s Tesla’s latest Superchargers (500kW).

The breakthrough, part of the all-new BYD Super e-Platform, was unveiled on March 17 at BYD’s headquarters in Shenzhen.”

From ZEcar.

Bloomberg | Motor Vehicles

Softbank-Backed Self-Driving Firm Wayve Nears Commercial Debut

“Wayve Technologies Ltd., the self-driving startup that raised more than $1 billion last year from investors including SoftBank Group Corp., said it’s nearing a commercial debut with major automakers.

The London-based company will launch its driver-assistance system with global automakers in the US and Germany ‘in the near term,’ Chief Executive Officer Alex Kendall said in an interview. He declined to provide a timeline or name any of the carmakers.

Wayve on Monday also published new data claiming its artificial intelligence-powered software can adapt to US driving behaviors faster and at a lower cost than existing approaches.”

From Bloomberg.