Solar-powered plane completes Moroccan desert flight
A solar-powered plane early Friday completed a flight over the
Moroccan desert to showcase renewable energy, as a key summit in Rio
discussed "greening" the world economy. The Swiss-made Solar Impulse
landed in Ouarzazate at 26 minutes after midnight (2326 GMT) after
having taken off from Rabat at dawn on Thursday."Once again, the flight
was magnificent," Borschberg said shortly before landing.
Earlier,
during the flight, pilot Andre Borschberg told AFP by satellite
telephone from his cockpit said he was optimistic about the chances of
success."The sky is magnificently beautiful and I am pretty confident of
arriving at the destination," pilot Andre Borschberg said.
"I can see far away the Moroccan coast in a superb blue ... Today
everything seems possible. In Ouarzazate, the weather forecast is good,"
he added.
"Mother Nature seems to be more favourable than the last time."
An earlier attempt to reach Ouarzazate last week was foiled by rough
conditions but the giant sun-powered plane.When Borschberg made his
first attempt to cross the desert on June 13, he had to turn round
because of strong winds and turbulence near the Atlas Mountains.
This was the final stage of a trip that has taken him from his native
Switzerland to Spain and then to Morocco.Earlier this month, fellow
inventor and adventurer Bertrand Piccard who made the first non stop
around-the world balloon flight 13 years ago flew Solar Impulse from
Madrid to Rabat.
It was the first-ever flight between two continents by an aircraft
that does not require a single drop of fuel."Our journey shows that
there are other ways of saving energy and of saving the environment and
the planet," Borschberg told AFP from the cockpit of his plane, which
looks like a giant glider.
At one point, about halfway into the final and toughest leg of the
solar plane's trip, the craft was flying over the Atlantic towards the
port city of Casablanca at a speed of about 38.6mph.
Friday's landing point, Ouarzazate, is where the Moroccan authorities
plan to build the largest solar power station in the world. Speaking of
his foiled bid the previous week, Borschberg said people "should not
talk of failure, but of experience. It's training, you learn a lot of
things."
The flight was described as the most challenging Solar Impulse has
yet faced because of the arid, baking hot nature of the terrain and the
proximity of the mountains, which are more than 9,800 feet high.
The giant hi-tech aircraft, which has the wingspan of a jumbo jet but
weighs no more than a medium-sized car, is fitted with 12,000 solar
cells feeding four electric motors driving propellers.
Ouarzazate is 340 miles from the Moroccan capital. The flight took
more than 17 and a half hours, slightly more than the 16 hours they had
estimated.But the prototype aircraft has a slow speed and was to some
extent at the mercy of the unpredictable climate.
The flight has been jointly organised by the Swiss Solar Impulse
company and the Moroccan agency for solar energy (Mason).Masen is
responsible for building a power station with an initial capacity of 160
megawatts and plans to raise this capacity to about 500MW to 2015. Last
month, the solar-powered plane made the 1,550-mile journey from Madrid
to Rabat, its longest to date and its first between continents, after an
inaugural flight to Paris and Brussels last year. .
- Daily Telegraph
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