A
record-breaking attempt to fly around the world in a plane using only solar
power has been launched in Abu Dhabi. The landmark journey aims to promote
green energy.
Deutsche Welle, 9 March 2015
In a possible transportation breakthrough, a solar-powered plane left Abu Dhabi at
7:12 a.m. (0412 UTC) Monday, beginning the first attempt to circumnavigate the
world without fossil fuel.
André
Borschberg sat at the controls of the single-seater Solar Impulse 2 when it
departed from Al Bateen Executive Airport. He will trade off piloting with
co-founder Bertrand Piccard during stopovers.
![]() |
Borschberg (right) and Piccard will be sharing the cockpit duties in the coming months |
The plane,
which operates on 17,000 solar cells and four 17.5-horsepower electric motors,
aims to create awareness about replacing "old polluting technologies with
clean and efficient technologies."
The Si2 -
successor to a smaller aircraft that notched a 26-hour flight in 2010 - flies
50-100 kilometers per hour (30-60 mph). The plane will land Monday in Muscat,
the capital of Oman, approximately 10 hours after takeoff. The launch,
originally scheduled for Saturday but delayed due to high winds, capped 13
years of research and testing by Borschberg and Piccard.
"Climate
change is a fantastic opportunity to bring to the market new green technologies
that save energy, save natural resources of our planet, make profit, create
jobs and sustain growth," Piccard said. In 1999, he became the first
person to circumnavigate the globe in a hot air balloon, and believes that
clean technology and renewable energy "can achieve the impossible."
En route to #Oman! The #solarTEAM in #AbuDhabi is preparing for #Flight1's landing pic.twitter.com/NJutXDQ8IG
— SOLAR IMPULSE (@solarimpulse) 9 maart 2015
'A human
challenge'
Si2 will
make 12 stops over five months, with a flight time of 25 days. The plane will
cross the Arabian Sea to India before heading on to Myanmar, China, Hawaii and
New York, with landings also earmarked for the Midwestern US and southern
Europe or North Africa, depending on weather conditions. A return to Abu Dhabi
is scheduled for July.
![]() |
The Monaco control center had royal guests for take-off |
"It is
a human challenge," Borschberg told reporters on Sunday.
With a
wingspan of 72 meters (236 feet), slightly bigger than that of a jumbo jet, the
Si2 weighs 2.3 tons, or about as much as an SUV or larger family car. Though
Borschberg and Piccard will take turns inside the plane, it can also fly on
autopilot during rest breaks.
The pilots
underwent intensive training in preparation for the trip, including yoga and
self-hypnosis, allowing them to sleep for periods as short as 20 minutes but
awaken feeling refreshed. They will be in close contact with a control center
staffed by 65 weather forecasters, air traffic controllers and engineers in
Monaco.
mkg/cmk (AFP, dpa, AP)
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