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Ultra-light, fast and cheap: Move aside China, a small Slovenian company wants to sell the world's first electric four-seater plane

More than a century after the Wright brothers flew the world's first powered aircraft, developers are in a race for the first commercially-viable electric planes

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The Taurus Electro is available to customers worldwide. Photo: Pipistrel
Agence France-Presse

As China gives the green light to the production of its first electric aircraft for commercial use, a small Slovenian company also hopes to revolutionise the aviation industry with its award-winning electric planes.

Pipistrel's pioneering Taurus Electro is seen as a breath of fresh air in a sector responsible for 13 per cent of CO2 emissions from all transport sources.

Launched in 2007, around 20 orders are now put in every year for the two-seater plane, which is produced in a factory in the town of Ajdovscina, close to the Italian border.

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The 110,000-euro (HK$935,973) price tag is offset by the plane's inexpensive maintenance: at 70 cents an hour, the Taurus is 10 times cheaper to run than traditional twin-seater planes, according to Pipistrel.

By comparison, China’s two-seat RX1E aircraft, which has just been approved for production by civil aviation authorities, costs about 1 million yuan (HK$1.2 million).
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The Chinese government sees ‘strong market potential’ for the two-seat RX1E plane due to its environmental friendliness. But at 1 million yuan it’s not cheap. Photo: SCMP Pictures
The Chinese government sees ‘strong market potential’ for the two-seat RX1E plane due to its environmental friendliness. But at 1 million yuan it’s not cheap. Photo: SCMP Pictures
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