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Israel’s ‘flying car’ passenger drone moves closer to delivery

The Cormorant, billed as a flying car, is capable of transporting 500kg of weight and travelling at 185km/h

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A prototype of the Cormorant, a drone. Photo: Reuters
Reuters

After 15 years of development, an Israeli tech firm is optimistic it will finally get its 1.5 tonne passenger carrying drone off the ground and into the market by 2020.

The Cormorant, billed as a flying car, is capable of transporting 500kg of weight and travelling at 185km/h. It completed its first automated solo flight over terrain in November. Its total price is estimated at US$14 million.

It could revolutionise several aspects of warfare, including medical evacuation of soldiers on the battlefield
Tal Inbar, Fisher Institute for Air and Space Strategic Studies

Developers Urban Aeronautics believe the dark green drone, which uses internal rotors rather than helicopter propellers, could evacuate people from hostile environments and/or allow military forces safe access.

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“Just imagine a dirty bomb in a city and chemical substance of something else and this vehicle can come in robotically, remotely piloted, come into a street and decontaminate an area,” Urban Aeronautics founder and CEO Rafi Yoeli said.

Rafi Yoeli, founder and CEO of Urban Aeronautics, next to a prototype of the Cormorant. Photo: Reuters
Rafi Yoeli, founder and CEO of Urban Aeronautics, next to a prototype of the Cormorant. Photo: Reuters
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Yoeli set up the company, based in a large hanger in Yavne, central Israel, in 2001 to create the drone, which he says is safer than a helicopter as it can fly in between buildings and below power lines without the risk of blade strikes.

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