2024 Olympics: Paris aims to beat Olympic traffic with flying taxis from airport

2024 Olympics: Paris aims to beat Olympic traffic with flying taxis from airport

2024 Olympics organisers are looking to fnd solution to the an hour long haul by train or bus into town from Charles de Gaulle airport to the north of Paris. They’re considering the feasibility of self-flying urban taxi of the future.

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2024 Olympics: Paris aims to beat Olympic traffic with flying taxis from airport

Le Bourget, France: Paris aims to give visitors to the 2024 Paris Olympics a flying start by offering airborne taxis to tournament sites straight from the airport.

Arrivals in the City of Light currently face an hour-long haul by train or bus into town from Charles de Gaulle airport to the north of Paris.

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(FILES) This file photo taken on May 15, 2017 shows the entrance of the Paris-Le Bourget Exhibition venue in Le Bourget as the IOC Evaluation Commission continues with its visit to Paris, before a vote for the 2024 Summer Olympics. Los Angeles has agreed terms with Olympic officials on a deal that will bring the Summer Games to Southern California in 2028 instead of 2024, city officials told AFP on July 31, 2017. The agreement opens the door for Paris, Los Angeles' only rival in bidding for 2024, to host the Games in seven years. The deal also will bring the Summer Olympics to Los Angeles for a third time, after the city staged the games in 1984 and 1932. / AFP PHOTO / FRANCK FIFE

But if Aeroports de Paris (ADP), Airbus and the RATP regional transport have their way passengers, right after their jets have taxied to a halt on the runway, will be able to take to the air once again with a self-flying urban taxi of the future.

The firms used this past week’s Paris Air Show to say the Olympics afforded the perfect opportunity to bring into service futuristic Vertical Take-off and Landing (VTOL) machines, and that they would launch a feasibility study.

“In 2010, for the first time, more than half of humanity was living in urban zones and we think we shall surpass 60 percent by 2030,” said Airbus CEO Guillaume Faury.

The time had now come to vault up to “the third dimension” of local commutes – air, he said.

“If we have the conviction that in the next five, 10, 15, 20 or 30 years low altitude is a space to be conquered we have to put in place the conditions today,” said ADP Group’s executive director general Edward Arkwright.

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VTOL converts are already sprouting in number as the world looks to move beyond – or rather, above – today’s saturated motorways and growing environmental concerns.

Back on the ground, the view has been muddied by a delay beyond the Games, to 2025, of the express fast train designed to cut congestion and travel time between Charles de Gaulle airport and the city centre.

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For aircraft manufacturer Airbus, airport manager ADP and RATP, which manages Parisian public transport services, the Games are a chance to showcase French savoir-faire in urban mobility.

Multitude of projects

ADP has until the end of the year to choose a site for a “Vertiport” capable of hosting taxis from one of 10 aerodromes in the region around Paris.

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The idea is to have the venue ready in 18 months, requiring infrastructure investment of some ten million euros ($11.3 million), says Arkwright. He adds the project will test out the link “via an existing helicopter corridor”.

Ideally, the service would see the taxis take off every six minutes.

In order to make VTOL a reality by 2024, ADP is working alongside Airbus, which has for some years been involved in full electric propulsion urban mobility schemes.

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The manufacturer already has two prototype models – the single-seater “Vahana” and the four-seater variant “CityAirbus”.

Faury explained that “the two projects will converge towards a vehicle that will respond to first cases of use.”

“This partnership is a unique opportunity to develop technological solutions, a product, a regulatory framework, an economic model,” Faury added.

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‘Important stage’

“This project reduces constraints not only in terms of infrastructure but also concerning air traffic as it involves experimenting in a specific (air) corridor,” said Jean-Louis Rassineux, head of aeronautics and defence issues for Deloitte.

“It is large scale rollout which is going to be complicated,” Rassineux told AFP.

Along with required progress on battery power and anti-collision detection he said there were “constraints regarding compatibility and traffic regulation.”

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But there is also the issue of the extent to which the concept will gain widespread public acceptance.

Rassineux warned there would need to be “security levels as stringent as those for air traffic” as well as “real value added to existing transport” systems.

Deloitte estimates the size of the airborne taxi market at some $17 billion for the United States alone through to 2040.

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Yet “there remains some way to go before a flying vehicle becomes integrated into urban transport,” cautioned France’s transport minister, Elisabeth Borne.

Borne nonetheless sees moves towards creating an embryonic service in time for the 2024 games as “one of the important stages” towards “the emergence of a complete transport offering” which would be “integrated and which respects the environment”.

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