Posted inEmergent Tech

Leonardo showcase tiltrotor at Expo 2020

Leonardo shows off its latest technologies at Expo 2020, including the AW609 tiltrotor.

Leonardo
Leonardo’s AW609 tiltrotor offers new urban transport possibilities.

On January 25, the Italian Pavilion at Expo 2020 hosted the ‘The Flying Society’, an event hosted by Leonardo, a global defence and aerospace company. Speakers sharing their experiences and vision included Dr Nicoletta Lacobacci, global technologies and ethics advisor, General Luigi Casali, chief of staff of the Italian Air Education and Training Command, and Roberto Garavaglia, SVP helicopters strategy and innovation at Leonardo.

“Expo 2020 Dubai confirms the attention of the UAE to new technologies, with a focus on those related to aviation. I believe that the three key themes of this Expo – ‘Opportunity, Sustainability, Mobility’ – perfectly encompass the promises and challenges of aviation that we want to highlight in today’s event. Leonardo – and Italy – have been part of the history of flight from the beginning, aiming, throughout the decades, at maintaining its technological edge. We have the ambition to continue as a leader in the next era of aviation and we are investing to meet this commitment,” explained Valerio Cioffi, Leonardo’s general manager.

AW609 tiltrotor

The Italy Pavilion is displaying a nacelle of Leonardo’s AW609 tiltrotor, the only aircraft of its kind set to receive civil certification and to potentially change point-to-point transportation, thanks to its ability to change the position of its two nacelles and rotors in less than 60 seconds. This feature allows the tiltrotor to take-off vertically like a helicopter while flying with the performance of an aeroplane.

As a part of the company’s strategic vision for urban aviation in the near future, Leonardo, along with its Emirati partner Falcon Aviation Services, has built a new concept helicopter terminal at the Dubai Expo site. The site includes travellers’ spaces designed to house showrooms where commercial and cultural activities can be offered within a structure built with sustainable materials, which can be easily re-modelled or re-allocated as the needs of the city changes.

Sheikha Al Maktoum, who was in attendance for the event, said: “I was only 12 when I tasted the freedom of flying, the exhilarating feeling of soaring up in the sky: it was a chance encounter and love at first flight. I truly hope my journey could serve as inspiration and encouragement to all young women still searching for a path, and prove to them that there is space for them in serving our country. It is time to tell the stories of the women who paved the way, so that the next generation grow up knowing the names of those women, their stories, dreaming of equal achievements and being inspired by their legacy.”

Adaptation is key

Casali, said, “One of the challenges that we are facing and will continue to face in the forthcoming decades is the capacity to adapt our selection and training processes in order to maintain the technological ecosystem boost that we are witnessing. We need a modular flexible system that will be able to adapt rapidly to the new technologies and social development of the younger population meeting the training needs of tomorrow. A deep analysis of what roles, the skills and the training pipeline of the future generation pilot needs to be a priority in order to recruit, train, and deliver the future aviators of our air forces.”

“Is it possible, when dealing with technological choices to integrate feminine values? Should we reboot ethics that are not only managed by laws or principles, but also through empathy, compassion, and care?” asked Dr Lacobacci. “Women are crucial in building the future. They are quick and determined, they are practical, collaborative, and savvy. Practicality, empathy, collaboration, respect, and determination are necessary to create an augmented but still humane future. Therefore, my message is for young girls and women in general: embrace technology and science, because it is not only an opportunity. Today it is a duty.”

Leonardo high-tech platforms in the UAE include more than 100 helicopters, naval systems, secure communications applications, space technologies and training aircraft, including the Aermacchi MB-339 jet trainer, chosen for the Emirati national aerobatic team, Al Fursan.

NEOM and Volocopter recently announced a partnership to develop the world’s first public vertical mobility system in Saudi Arabia.