Deloitte buys into the widespread high expectations for the advanced air mobility (AAM) sector, but—as one might expect from a company grounded in accountancy—wants to crunch numbers with dollar signs attached to assess its potential. In its new study, AAM: Disrupting the Future of Mobility, the consulting group seeks to assess its prospects from a consumer point of view and considers how eVTOL aircraft will be able to compete with existing modes of transportation.
The opening section of the 12-page report breaks down how a 25-mile journey can be cut from 74 minutes in a car to 29 minutes. This includes five-minute first- and last-mile segments at either end of a 10-minute eVTOL flight, with seven minutes allowed for boarding the aircraft and two more minutes to deplane and transfer to the final leg of ground transportation.
Perhaps more interestingly from a consumer perspective at a time of soaring inflation, the Deloitte researchers also looked at the cost of that 25-mile trip. They concluded that in an eVTOL aircraft it would come to $3 per seat mile, compared with $2 in a standard taxi and $3.80 for a “premium” taxi.
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