"New age of aviation" starts in Washington
A prototype, the all-electric airplane took its first flight this week in central Washington state.
The commuter plane, called the Alice, was created by the Israeli-American startup Eviation.
The Seattle Times reported that if the Federal Aviation Administration eventually certifies the small airplane to carry passengers, it could become the first all-electric commercial airplane, reports The Times of Israel.
The plane was built to carry nine passengers and two pilots and took off from Moses Lake, Washington, at 7:10 am on September 26.
The plane reached an altitude of 3,500 feet (1,066 meters) and landed eight minutes later.
The company’s goal is to show such electric planes are viable as commuter aircraft for regional travel, flying at an altitude of about 15,000 feet (4,572 meters).
The plane, designed by engineers in Israel and Washington state, is powered by 21,500 small Tesla-style battery cells that weigh over 4 tons.
Eviation founder Omer Bar-Yohav hailed the plane as a “new age of aviation” in an interview with The Times of Israel last year.
“We have a product that is sustainable, it is economically sustainable, as it is cheap to operate and maintain, and it is socially sustainable — this is a mode of transportation people want to use,” Bar-Yohay said.