Skip to main content

Passenger eVTOLs 'regulated by 2025'

European Union Aviation Safety Agency comments in run-up to Amsterdam Drone Week
By Adam Hill February 28, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
Passenger drones: coming soon (© Haiyin | Dreamstime.com)

Regulations for passenger transport with manned electric vertical take-off and landing (eVTOLs) "will be a reality by 2025 at the latest", according to a leading safety expert.

Patrick Ky, executive director of European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA), says: "I don't think there will be thousands of these vehicles flying over our heads by 2035."

"By then, however, it should be possible for individuals to safely travel from Amsterdam to Brussels in half an hour by eVTOLs. Congestion problems will also be reduced by airborne logistics transport by drones."

EASA is involved with setting up Amsterdam Drone Week (ADW) at RAI Amsterdam, which runs from 21-23 March 2023.

Ky, who is shortly to step down from EASA after 10 years, says the European Commission's Drone Strategy 2.0 presented by the European Commission at the end of last year, was vital in promoting drone development in Europe.

"That has been an important milestone, because regulation for a new market structure within the drone market leads to a momentum that ensures an increase of jobs in the sector," he says. "The strategic plan is invaluable for the development of innovative air mobility in Europe."

"The industry has blossomed. You can't separate that from the innovations that have led to the use of hydrogen as a fuel, but also from the increase in electric and hybrid vehicles," Ky concludes. "These new technologies have been developed over the past decade, thus creating momentum."

For the first time in ADW's five-year existence, a reduced rate applies to authorities and governmental bodies: click here to request tickets.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • We need to talk about AVs
    October 15, 2021
    Will driverless vehicles lead to more deaths and destroy more lives than their manual counterparts? Transport writer Colin Sowman argues that they will
  • Growth of OEM telematics in new passenger cars
    March 3, 2016
    The latest research by ABI Research forecasts the global penetration of embedded and hybrid factory installed OEM telematics in new passenger cars to exceed 72 per cent by 2021. Growth will mainly be driven by key volume car OEMs in the US, European Union and China markets. Brands within these markets showing accelerated growth include GM, which expects to reach 12 million OnStar subscribers globally by the end of 2016, including its Opel brand in Europe and Cadillac in China; and Ford, which claims to have
  • GIS-based state of the art emergency response, damage recovery
    January 26, 2012
    The gecko is one of several members of the lizard family which demonstrate autotomy: the ability to re-grow a tail or some other appendage lost during a time of peril. The GITA's GECCo programme is looking to give US infrastructures much the same capability
  • Pony.ai & Sany go AV trucking
    August 19, 2022
    Joint venture will see companies develop Level 4 autonomous truck for mass production