SAO PAULO, June 20 (Reuters) – Electric aircraft maker Eve (EVEX.N), controlled by Brazil’s Embraer (EMBR3.SA), said on Tuesday it has signed letters of intent for potential sales of its “flying car” to Voar Aviation, Nordic Aviation and Wideroe Zero.
The fresh deals, announced during the Paris Airshow, include the possible purchase of 70 electric vertical take-off and landing vehicles (eVTOLs) by Voar, 30 aircraft by lessor Nordic and 50 aircraft by Wideroe.
Eve, which holds a backlog of some 2,800 orders before starting production, has recently completed wind tunnel testing for the futuristic vehicle and expects to start commercial operations in 2026.
Under the new agreements, Eve said in a statement, Voar would operate its eVTOLs in Brazil’s main metropolitan areas and popular tourist destinations, such as Sao Paulo, Florianopolis and Salvador.
Nordic will acquire 15 firm orders plus 15 optional eVTOLs that will be leased to fleet operators, the company added, while Norway’s Wideroe would look at launching the “flying car” operations in Scandinavia.
Wideroe Zero’s parent Wideroe is already an Embraer customer for conventional jets, currently having three E190-E2 aircraft in its fleet. Its low-carbon unit envisions all domestic short-haul flights to be electric as part of Norway’s goal of achieving carbon-neutral aviation by 2040.
Reporting by Gabriel Araujo; Editing by Kirsten Donovan and Louise Heavens
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