Arab News
Arab News, Tue, Feb 11, 2025 | Shaban 12, 1446
Saudi Arabia bets on flying taxis and autonomous vehicles to transform mobility
Saudi Arabia:
Saudi Arabia is positioning itself at the
forefront of mobility innovation, with industry leaders highlighting the
potential of flying taxis and autonomous vehicles at the LEAP conference in
Riyadh.
FlyNow, a developer of electric aviation
solutions, is preparing to roll out a modular system of helicopters to transport
goods and passengers, according to co-founder and chief operating officer Yvonne
Winter.
“Economic growth is tightly linked to mobility,”
Winter said during a panel discussion, adding: “And to solve traffic issues
related to congestion, air quality pollution, and noise pollution, air
transportation is the way to go.”
She described this new industry as “the
low-altitude economy,” and insisted that “together we have to find a way to
unlock it.”
Winter noted that one of the biggest challenges
for international governments and regulatory bodies is the absence of a feasible
blueprint for implementation — an issue FlyNow has tackled with a step-by-step
approach that “is considered to be very safe.”
As part of this approach, a regulatory sandbox has
been developed to validate different vehicles, air traffic management systems,
and operational reports before progressing to cargo applications.
Following extensive cargo trials over
low-population areas, FlyNow plans to expand testing to urban settings and
passenger transport.
Winter said e-helicopters will reduce waiting
times and be both affordable and accessible to the public.
Mobility push
Ayman Mesfer, general manager of the
Intelligence and Future Sector at the Ministry of Transport and Logistics
Services, said Saudi Arabia is embracing new technologies across all
transportation modes: land, air, and sea.
The ministry plans to launch an incubator to
provide financial and advisory support for small and medium-sized enterprises
working on mobility solutions.
“The ministry will take a look at deployment of
new and major technologies from all aspects, from AI applications, data
utilizations, as well as the talents as the enablers, and the infrastructure,”
Mesfer said.
Omaima Bamasag, deputy of transport
enablement at the Transport General Authority, highlighted the agency’s new
Future Mobility Program. The initiative comprises 12 stakeholders from both the
public and private sectors, working to identify gaps in Saudi Arabia’s mobility
systems and propose new plans.
Approved by the Higher Committee for
Transportation, led by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the committee has
already introduced 216 projects and identified 16 gaps, with alternative
projects designed to bridge them.
Key successes include the development of a
framework for autonomous vehicle policies, pilot requirements for AVs, the
deployment of scooters during the past two Hajj seasons, a student shuttle at
King Saud University, and Jahez food delivery services during Hajj.
“This is all piling up toward realizing AV
ambitions and validating the AV policy and regulation that has been put forward.
And keep an eye out for a pilot AV taxi that you will be seeing soon here in
Riyadh,” Bamasag said.
Infrastructure and partnerships
According to Mesfer, the Ministry of Transport and
Logistics Services has partnered with multiple entities to develop the
regulatory framework and infrastructure for these technologies.
Alongside the General Authority for Civil
Aviation, the ministry has developed an advanced air mobility roadmap tracking
aviation and drone deployment.
It has also partnered with King Abdullah
University of Science and Technology to construct a new testing ground,
described as a “living lab” to assess technologies across land, maritime,
railway, and aviation sectors. Additional collaborating entities include TGA and
the Roads General Authority. The country has already piloted an air taxi in NEOM,
signaling its commitment to integrating futuristic transportation solutions.
In November 2023, TGA established a regulatory
sandbox to facili
tate the testing of unregulated mobility
technologies. Since then, five business models have emerged: micromobility,
e-scooters, e-car rentals, ride-sharing, and drop-off and pick-up boxes.
“Gathering all these challenges, trying to resolve
them, and paving the way for these technologies to be regulated and then
licensed.
Once these technologies or companies are licensed,
they will have a tremendous impact on GDP and job creation,” he said.
On innovative mobility solutions, Antonio Jara,
chief security officer of Libelium, spoke about the company’s work in Saudi
Arabia and Europe to create digital twins for low-emission zones. These models
integrate data from IoT sensors, noise, and air quality metrics.
Jara emphasized the importance of data
spaces for normalization, smart modeling, classification, and quality
assessment, creating a secure data exchange platform between stakeholders.
That data is then incorporated into AI models,
such as zonification for clustering, pollution simulation and forecasting or
digital twins, CO2 equivalent modeling, and low-emission zone analysis.
These models help track pollution sources, provide
sustainability impact assessments, and monitor crowd movement.
Libelium’s AI capabilities include data
standardization, already implemented in major cities such as Amsterdam,
Helsinki, and Paris. Other models focus on traffic prediction, meteorological
data, clustering, and an LEZ service model for impact assessment.
Speaking to Arab News about Saudi applications,
Jara said: “Aramco, Johns Hopkins — they are optimizing parking with these AI
models. NEOM is another real example; they are monitoring all the pollution
propagation from the tunnels, The Line.”
Pollution tracking involves both real-time data
and predictive analysis.
“We are also doing a proof of concept in Riyadh
municipality because they want to understand the real benefit of the metro in
reducing traffic-related pollution,” Jara added.