Solar plane aiming for first round-the-world flight lands in India

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March 11, 2015

Ahmedabad, INDIA – The first round-the-world solar-powered flight landed in India on Wednesday, the second leg of a 35,000 km journey seeking to demonstrate that flying long distances fuelled by renewable energy is possible.

March 11, 2015

Ahmedabad, INDIA – The first round-the-world solar-powered flight landed in India on Wednesday, the second leg of a 35,000 km journey seeking to demonstrate that flying long distances fuelled by renewable energy is possible.

Pilot Bertrand Piccard and pilot Andre Boschberg are welcomed after landing Solar Impulse 2, the world's first airplane flying on solar energy, in Ahmedabad

The Solar Impulse 2 arrived in Ahmedabad after a flight of about 15 hours over the Arabian Sea from Muscat in Oman.

"It's a privilege to fly in an aeroplane like that," pilot Bertrand Piccard told reporters after landing.

Piccard and fellow pilot Andre Borschberg will take turns at the controls of Solar Impulse 2, which began its journey in Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates on Monday, as it makes its way around the globe in about 25 flight days at speeds of between 50 kph and 100 kph.

Solar Impulse 2, the world's first airplane flying on solar energy, lands in Ahmedabad © REUTERS

The next stop is Varanasi, the constituency of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who has made boosting clean energy a priority for his government.

After leaving India, the plane will make stopovers in Myanmar and China before crossing the Pacific Ocean and flying across the United States and southern Europe to arrive back in Abu Dhabi by late July.

The aircraft is as heavy as a family car at 2,300 kg but has a wingspan as wide as the largest airliner.

The design and construction of the Solar Impulse took 12 years. A first version of the craft rolled out in 2009 and broke records for height and distance travelled by a manned solar plane.


Courtesy: Reuters