Urban Air Mobility Investment To Top $318 Billion From 2020–2040

Credit to Author: Nicolas Zart| Date: Sun, 22 Sep 2019 03:14:08 +0000

Published on September 21st, 2019 | by Nicolas Zart

September 21st, 2019 by  

A little while back, the announced a partnership with Nexa Advisors to determine urban air mobility (UAM) investments from 2020–2040. The report shows that industry revenue is projected to top $318 billion by then.

Embraer EmbraerX eVTOL, courtesy Embraer.

The “Urban Air Mobility—Economics and Global Markets” study was to understand how the global economy is connected with point-to-point air service and how surface transit times for people and goods in the world’s major metropolitan communities continue to increase. The recent technology advancements, investments, and aircraft developments mean more investments. The study also highlights the need for infrastructure in major metropolitan areas between 2020 to 2040 if they want to compete in UAM. Nexa calls this the “DNA,” which includes current transportation issues, existing mobility infrastructure, and much more. The study can help cities determine whether they can be an early or late adopter of electric vertical takeoff & landing (eVTOL) aircraft.

Bell Nexus eVTOL at CES. Photo by Nicolas Zart, CleanTechnica

The Nexa and VFS sees vertiports and air traffic management as the key focus in 74 cities globally. 5 key segments became apparent: business aviation, on-demand , airport shuttles, emergency services, and regional point-to-point charters ranging up to 250 miles for service range.

And for those who see these eVTOL and aircraft as the swan dance for helicopters, think again. Helicopter use will continue to be part of the solution to meet the rising demand UAM will create.

This study comes on the heels of another interesting study, “The NASA Urban Air Mobility Grand Challenge” study, which will launch in 2020 (see the Executive Summary here by Crown Consulting.) This study explored 3 potential Unmanned Aerial System (UAS) and eVTOL use cases and their viability in 15 US cities. The study included last-mile delivery (for packages), air metro (an autonomous public transit style commuter system), and air taxi (an autonomous on-demand ridesharing system).

It found commercial viability for last-mile parcel delivery and air metro by 2030, but not a widespread air taxi market due to high investment costs, as expected. The idea of high-net-worth individuals and businesses using various newer air taxi solutions most likely will happen first, as with any new technology introduction. The study concluded that it is “critical to evaluate UAM in terms of specific use cases” and the “viability of specific UAM use cases likely requires a holistic approach that takes into account a complex ecosystem.”

Image courtesy EVA eVTOL X01, via EVA.

EVA eVTOL X01, courtesy EVA.

Image courtesy Rolls-Royce Aeronautics.

The second study looked at 3 potential UAM markets — Airport Shuttle, Air Taxi, and Air Ambulance — in 10 target urban areas. There seems to be a case for the Airport Shuttle and Air Taxi segments as viable markets with a “significant total available market value of $500 billion at the market entry price points in the best-case unconstrained scenario.”

The report doesn’t feel the air ambulance market served by eVTOL aircraft will be viable due to technology constraints. It found that a hybrid VTOL aircraft would make the market potentially viable and presumably help the latter. As expected, the report highlights a need for a “significant legal/regulatory, certification, public perception, infrastructure, and weather constraints.” It concludes by saying that “after applying operational constraints/barriers, 0.5% of the total available market worth $2.5B can be captured in the near term.”

Basically, the report finds that there are no capacity limitations and demand is not constrained by a willingness to pay.

BlackFly OPENER Personal eVTOL, courtesy BlackFly.

Both UAM reports were commissioned by NASA for the launch of its first urban air mobility “Grand Challenge.” It will serve as an integrated vehicle and airspace operational environment as a “proving ground” for vehicle developers.

 
 




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Nicolas was born and raised around classic cars of the 1920s, but it wasn’t until he drove an AC Propulsion eBox and a Tesla Roadster that the light went on. Ever since he has produced green mobility content on various CleanTech outlets since 2007 and found his home on CleanTechnica. His communication passion led to cover electric vehicles, autonomous vehicles, renewable energy, test drives, podcasts, shoot pictures, and film for various international outlets in print and online. Nicolas offers an in-depth look at the e-mobility world through interviews and the many contacts he has forged in those industries. His favorite taglines are: “There are more solutions than obstacles.” and “Yesterday’s Future Now”

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