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The Japan News/Yomiuri
The Japan News/Yomiuri
Business
The Yomiuri Shimbun

ANA, Toyota, Joby to tie up on flying car venture

ANA planes are seen at Chubu Centrair International Airport near Nagoya in June 2021. (Credit: The Yomiuri Shimbun)

ANA Holdings Co. and U.S. mobility firm Joby Aviation announced Tuesday that they and Toyota Motor Corp. will start considering a business tie-up in the field of flying cars.

With the entry of the Japan's largest airline, the air transportation network can be fully developed to reach places that are too close or impractical for an airplane but inconveniently far by bus or taxi.

Joby plans to launch a flying car passenger service in the United States in 2024. It was looking for a business partner in Japan with a view to expanding overseas.

Under the partnership, ANA will start a joint flying car venture to carry passengers using the electric vertical takeoff and landing vehicles of the U.S. firm.

Aiming to launch the service in 2025, ANA will provide know-how in the aviation business, such as flight management technology and pilot training. Toyota is expected to handle the ground transportation for users of the new service.

ANA is believed to have teamed up with Joby in the hope of expanding its customer base by offering more convenient middle-distance transportation in Japan. Joby has developed a five-seat flying car with a maximum cruising distance of about 240 kilometers and a maximum speed of 320 kph.

In 2020, Toyota invested 394 million dollars (about 45 billion yen) in Joby and started joint development for such vehicles. Toyota will provide the U.S. firm with electrification technology it has cultivated in hybrid and electric vehicles as well as know-how on productivity improvement.

Flying cars, which are similar to ultracompact helicopters, are expected to become a next-generation transportation method using no runways or fossil fuels.

Morgan Stanley of the United States estimates that the global market for flying cars will grow to a size of about 1.5 trillion dollars (about 172 trillion yen) in 2040 from about 7.4 billion dollars (about 850 billion yen) in 2020.

There is no strict definition of flying cars, but companies around the world are developing electrically powered passenger vehicles that can be operated automatically and can take off and land vertically.

Read more from The Japan News at https://japannews.yomiuri.co.jp/

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