Solar Impulse 2 back in Switzerland
Plane’s stay at Dübendorf would be temporary, company looking for best option

Abu Dhabi: Solar Impulse 2 (Si2), the first zero-fuel airplane that
circumnavigated the world, is waiting for its future role after it was
shipped back to Switzerland from Abu Dhabi last week.
The plane
had set several world records by flying more than 40,000km in 17 legs
and 15 months on solar power alone, crossing Asia, the Pacific, the USA,
the Atlantic, the Mediterranean and the Middle East. The plane
supported by Abu Dhabi Future Energy Company, Masdar, had started its
world trip from Abu Dhabi and completed it here with Swiss adventurers
Bertrand Piccard and Andre Borschberg taking turns in the cockpit.
Now
Si2 is finally back to its origins, where the idea began and the
adventure of perpetual endurance started 13 years ago, the Solar Impulse
teams said.
“The airplane couldn’t stay in Abu Dhabi, therefore,
we brought it back to Switzerland where we have a hangar to store it
until we find the best option,” an official spokesperson of Solar
Impulse, the organisation that owns the plane, told Gulf News by email
from Switzerland on Wednesday.
Asked whether the public can see
the plane at Dübendorf airfield in Switzerland where it is being kept
now, she said: “The airplane won’t be reassembled in Dübendorf because
the hangar doesn’t allow it; it’s too small. Therefore, we will not
organise public display.”
A Solar Impulse announcement said the
plane’s stay at Dübendorf would be temporary as they were looking for
the best option for her future. They added that it was not an easy task
given the plane’s 72-metre wingspan! The design of the aircraft, the
right weather window or the necessary authorisations were challenging in
this regard, they said.
Museums in different parts of the world
have shown keen interest in hosting Si2, but none of them has sufficient
space for an airplane that size. Asked whether this option was totally
ruled out due to the plane’s size, the spokesperson said: “ No, if we
cannot find a place where the airplane can be displayed entirely, we are
also considering displaying only part of the plane — its fuselage,
cockpit, wing etc,” she said.
Solar Impulse is considering using
the plane in future technological projects. The spokesperson said the
possible areas of the projects would be electrical propulsion and power
management, but it was too early to give the details.
Borschberg, one of the pilots, said: “Si2 is now back in Dübendorf,
where it was designed and built and where the team is currently working
on new and efficient transportation solutions.”
Piccard, another
co-pilot, said: “Solar Impulse’s message continues. The flight around
the world was only the first part of the adventure; the second is the
World Alliance for Clean Technologies that was launched in Marrakesh on
November 11.”
Solar Impulse said its engineers have been
continuing to work on innovative projects, such as unmanned and high
endurance electric aircraft.
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