While interest in Urban Air Mobility, or highly automated
aircraft that can be used for passengers and cargo and are
designed to operate in populated areas, has grown substantially,
it creates "new and complex safety challenges" for the Federal
Aviation Administration (FAA), which is currently reviewing
applications for certifying eVTOL aircraft, the watchdog said.
The sector includes electric vertical takeoff and landing, or
eVTOL, aircraft, which use electrical propulsion to take off,
hover and land vertically. The aircraft typically carry only a
few passengers per pilot.
The FAA said it "will cooperate fully with the Office of the
Inspector General’s audit and looks forward to providing
information about our extensive safety work in this area."
In highlighting the challenges for the FAA, the inspector
general's office noted that the existing regulation for aircraft
certification that is being used is "still primarily intended
for traditional small aircraft with a pilot onboard, whereas
eVTOL aircraft may be entirely autonomous."
Well-established aviation and automotive manufacturers like
Boeing, Embraer, Airbus, United Airlines, Toyota Motor Corp and
Stellantis are among companies pouring money into the nascent
eVTOL sector.
Morgan Stanley analysts last year estimated the potential market
for eVTOLs could be worth $1 trillion by 2040, assuming
favorable regulatory outcomes. But they said regulatory risks
were one of the most underestimated for the sector given strict
safety requirements, especially for operating in dense urban
environments, as well as noise and pollution concerns.
The FAA said last week the agency and UK civil aviation
authorities have a range of discussions "focused on facilitating
certification and validating new eVTOL aircraft, production,
continued airworthiness, operations, and personnel licensing."
(Reporting by David Shepardson; editing by Jonathan Oatis and
Leslie Adler)
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