Skip to main content

Zeleros raises €7m to finance European hyperloop

Cash will used to push concept forward, says company and its backers
By Adam Hill June 2, 2020 Read time: 1 min
Zeleros: travelling towards 'major milestone'

Spanish firm Zeleros Hyperloop has raised more than €7 million in a new funding round. 

Hyperloop involves special vehicles travelling through a network of low-pressure tubes at speeds up to 1000km/h, over distances between 400km and 1,500km.

The company, based in Valencia, says the money will be used to develop the vehicle and "core technologies".

CEO David Pistoni, Chief Executive Officer at Zeleros, said: “These new funds will boost a major milestone of developing and demonstrating our technologies in a real environment of operation, bringing Zeleros closer to a multi-billion market opportunity to be captured in the next decades.”

Lead investor, engineering group Altran, says it is "accelerating disruptive innovation".

Pilar Rodríguez, Altran Spain strategy, innovation and R&D director commented: "With technologies like hyperloop we are changing the future of mobility."

Supporters of the concept say that hyperloop will be quick, with minimal energy cost and zero direct emissions, cutting routes such as Paris to Berlin to less than one hour.

Zeleros claims that a consolidated European hyperloop network could remove seven million tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions each year.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • US commits $5bn to EV charging network 
    February 18, 2022
    Total available to states in National EV Infrastructure Formula Programme in 2022 is $615m
  • Hawaii backs road user charging to replace fuel tax
    August 7, 2019
    Fuel tax revenue in Hawaii is falling - and even in paradise, someone has to pay. Adam Hill talks to Hawaii DoT’s Scot Uruda about a major change in the way the state funds road improvements All over the world, governments, transportation agencies and local authorities are casting around for new forms of revenue as the money from taxes imposed on fuel begins to trickle away. Spending is outstripping tax take as a combination of more efficient internal combustion engines and the increasing take-up of cars
  • Traffic Group: ‘Daily commute may never be the same’
    May 22, 2020
    The pandemic has taught us that our ideas about travel might need a rethink - Wes Guckert suggests a few ways in which change is coming
  • EU releases first transport infrastructure funds
    April 8, 2014
    Following its decision in March to make the first US$16.4 billion tranche of funding available for trans-European transport network projects, the European commission has now adopted the first work programmes within this framework: a multi-annual work programme covering larger projects with a total budget of US$15.1 billion and an annual work programme for 2014 addressing smaller projects with a budget of US1.3 billion. The funding priorities set out in these programmes include: The closing of missing lin