The
undergraduate students, who built the vehicle as part of their
graduation project from Helwan University just outside Cairo,
are rolling out a prototype one-person vehicle that runs on
compressed oxygen.
The go-kart-like vehicle comes as Egypt pushes ahead with
painful economic reforms that include deep cuts to energy
subsidies, measures tied to a three-year $12 billion IMF loan
program it began in late 2016.
The students say their vehicle can hit 40 kilometers an hour and
last 30 kilometers before needing to be refueled, and it only
costs about 18,000 Egyptian pounds ($1,008.40) to build.
"The operational cost of the vehicle... will be almost nothing.
You are basically using compressed air. You are not paying for
fuel and also you do not need cooling," said Mahmoud Yasser, a
student who helped design it.
The team is now looking to raise funding to expand the project
and mass produce the vehicles. They believe they can eventually
get the vehicles to top 100 kilometers an hour and run for 100
kilometers before needing to come up for air.
($1 = 17.8500 Egyptian pounds)
(Reporting by Mostafa Salem, Amr Abdallah and Mohamed Zaki;
Editing by Jan Harvey)
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