The aviation industry is in crisis, there’s a global push to cut carbon emissions, and many of us haven’t stepped on a plane or hugged far-flung loved ones in more than a year.
But now a fresh bunch of start-ups are working on supersonic and hypersonic projects. Last October frontrunner Boom Supersonic was the first to roll out an actual honest-to-goodness IRL demonstrator aircraft, the XB1.
CNN Travel caught up with its founder and CEO Blake Scholl and talk about Overture, the Mach 2.2 commercial airliner he wants to get in the air by 2026, and the company’s ambitions long-term plans.
“Either we fail or we change the world,” says Scholl over a video call from Denver, Colorado. There hasn’t been any major speed-up in travel times since the Jet Age of the ’50s and ’60s and his team hopes to change that.
Designed to seat between 65 and 88 people, Overture will focus on over 500 primarily transoceanic routes that will benefit from the aircraft’s Mach 2.2 speeds – more than twice as fast as today’s subsonic commercial jets.
Breaking the time barrier could be life-changing, says Scholl. “It changes where we can vacation, changes where we can do business, changes you can fall in love with or you can be close to.”
コメント