Speeding through steel tubes at airline speeds in a vacuum-powered pod – is this the future of sustainable travel?
Powered by electromagnetic propulsion, the hyperloop overcomes the challenges of electrifying long distance, high-speed travel, thanks to its use of low-pressure tubes and low-drag levitated capsules propelled by a highly efficient electric motor that runs on renewable energy.
There are environmental downsides – the effect of the infrastructure on ecosystems and the environmental footprint of the materials used to build it, for instance.
The hyperloop concept was first proposed in 2012 by Elon Musk as an open-source project for anyone to develop. Richard Branson’s Virgin Group plus a handful of others accepted the challenge to commercialise the technology.
Late last year, Virgin Hyperloop One CTO and co-founder Josh Giegel and director of passenger experience Sara Luchian became the first to take one for a spin in the Nevada desert.
The test took place at Virgin Hyperloop’s 500-metre test site in Las Vegas, where more than 400 unoccupied tests have taken place. The pair travelled at a speed of 160 km/h in a two-seater XP-2 vehicle which was specifically built to demonstrate that passengers can in fact safely travel in a hyperloop vehicle (watch video). The full production vehicle will be larger and seat up to 28 passengers.
“For the past few years, the Virgin Hyperloop team has been working on turning its ground breaking technology into reality,” Sir Richard Branson, Founder of the Virgin Group said at the time. “With today’s successful test, we have shown that this spirit of innovation will in fact change the way people everywhere live, work, and travel in the years to come.”