Exclusive: Virgin Hyperloop picks West Virginia to test high-speed
transport system
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[October 09, 2020]
By Eric M. Johnson and Joey Roulette
SEATTLE/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Virgin Hyperloop has picked the U.S.
state of West Virginia to host a $500 million certification center and
test track for billionaire Richard Branson's super high-speed travel
system, the company told Reuters.
The center will be the first U.S. regulatory proving ground for a
hyperloop system designed to whisk floating pods packed with passengers
and cargo through vacuum tubes at 600 miles (966 kmph) an hour or
faster.
Later, Branson announced the decision in a press conference on Thursday,
joined virtually by U.S. Transportation Department Secretary Elaine Chao,
the state's Republican governor Jim Justice, and U.S. Senators from West
Virginia Shelley Moore Capito, a Republican, and Joe Manchin, a
Democrat.
"Today we lay the foundation for commercial deployment and operations
across the United States of America and beyond," the company's Chief
Executive Jay Walder told reporters.
In a hyperloop system, which uses magnetic levitation to allow
near-silent travel, a trip between New York and Washington would take
just 30 minutes. That would be twice as fast as a commercial jet flight
and four times faster than a high-speed train.
Construction is slated to begin in 2022 on the site of a former coal
mine in Tucker and Grant Counties, West Virginia, with safety
certification by 2025 and commercial operations by 2030, the company
said.
Federal regulators will use the center, and accompanying six-mile test
track, to establish regulatory and safety standards, while Virgin will
test its product and infrastructure.
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An artist's rendering of Virgin Hyperloop's forthcoming
certification center and test track to be built in West Virginia.
Courtesy of VIRGIN HYPERLOOP/via REUTERS
The announcement comes less than three months after the Transportation
Department published guidance on a regulatory framework for U.S. hyperloop
systems. On Thursday, Chao said the guidance will enable the company "to spend
less time on government paperwork and more time on making hyperloop systems
fast, efficient, and above all, safe."
Virgin Hyperloop, which has raised more than $400 million, largely from United
Arab Emirates shipping company DP World and Branson, is among a number of firms
racing to launch new high-speed travel systems.
Canada's Transpod and Spain's Zeleros also aim to upend traditional passenger
and freight networks with similar technology they say will slash travel times,
congestion and environmental harm linked with petroleum-fueled machines.
Elon Musk's Boring Company envisions commuters zipping along underground tracks
in electric cars.
Virgin Hyperloop picked West Virginia after reviewing applications from 17 U.S.
states to host the center.
However, the company's most likely first route could be in India, linking Mumbai
to Pune, though the COVID-19 pandemic has delayed procurement and construction,
initially slated for 2020.
Virgin Hyperloop also has a research and development test track near Las Vegas,
Nevada.
(Reporting by Eric M. Johnson in Seattle and Joey Roulette in Washington;
Editing by David Gregorio)
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