The UMILES Next air taxi, Concept Integrity, equipped with FlyFree technology developed by the TECNALIA research centre, was presented yesterday in Brussels during the Drone Days organised by the European Commission as part of the Drone Strategy 2.0, an initiative aimed at promoting the development of new sustainable drone services and transport solutions that is backed by the European Commission.
According to a company press release:
“Through the flights conducted in Toulouse, Jaén and Lugo, TECNALIA and UMILES Next presented the technologies that had been validated during these tests, which will represent the future of safe and sustainable urban air mobility within the European Drone 2.0 strategy. Technologies such as: automatic flight altitude control; automatic landing and take-off; urban airspace integration tests (U-Space); in-flight tactical conflict resolution scenarios; dynamic geofencing – the geofencing system is integrated into the drones and uses GPS positioning and other navigation satellite signals to warn or restrict drone operators from entering locations which pose national security or aviation safety concerns. In this case, it provides anti-invasion monitoring in flight areas; detect and avoid systems for other drones in flight; dynamic re-routing (in the absence of a vertiport), which consists of changing flight plans due to tactical conflict resolution; cruising operations; coordination of flights with other drones and manned vehicles through the AIRUS U-space platform; integration testing, including aircraft simulation, drone identification and registration, geopositioning, flight mission plan conflict resolution, flight tracking and monitoring, interface with ATC (Air Traffic Controller) and emergency management.
“The validation of these technologies have represented a great step forward for the airspace integration of these types of aircraft, with the goal of validating future urban air traffic management with unmanned aircraft (U-space). The aim is to make the mobility of the future more intelligent and sustainable. These new systems and developments will mean that there are alternative transport solutions in increasingly crowded cities. UMILES Next and TECNALIA have set their sights on this with their urban air and ground mobility solutions, which are expected to become a real alternative by around 2028.
(Image: Philip Butterworth-Hayes)