Solar plane set for world tour after passing third test in UAE

A solar-powered plane made a third successful test flight in the United Arab Emirates on Monday ahead of a planned round-the-world tour to promote alternative energy. Organisers hope that Solar Impulse 2 may head off around the globe as early as Saturday but caution that the launch is dependent on the weather, even in the relatively cloudless Gulf. The hour-long test flight was the plane’s third from the UAE capital Abu Dhabi’s small Al-Bateen airport, but the first for Solar Impulse chairman Bertrand Piccard, the descendant of a family of Swiss scientist-adventurers. The pilot reported no problems, mission chiefs said.

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Solar Impulse chairman Bertrand Piccard

The project is the fruit of 13 years of research and testing by Piccard and Andre Borschberg, two Swiss pilots whose idea was initially ridiculed by the aviation industry. Their plane is powered by more than 17,000 solar cells built into its wings which, at 72 metres, are almost as long as those of an Airbus A380 superjumbo. The world tour will see the plane fly from Abu Dhabi to Muscat in the neighbouring Gulf sultanate of Oman before crossing the Arabian Sea to India. It will then head on to Myanmar, China, Hawaii and New York, travelling at speeds of between 50 and 100 kilometres per hour, slower at night to prevent batteries draining too quickly.