Si2

The Solar Impulse 2 (Si2) airplane has completed its three-day, two-night journey across the Pacific Ocean.

Controlled by Bertrand Piccard, the single-seater aircraft took off from Hawaii and landed safely at the Moffett Airfield, California, US, which is the home to Nasa’s Ames Research Centre and Google’s Planetary Ventures.

Discover B2B Marketing That Performs

Combine business intelligence and editorial excellence to reach engaged professionals across 36 leading media platforms.

Find out more

With 17,248 solar cells built into the wing powering the four batteries of the aircraft, Si2 crossed 4,523km over the Pacific.

With the completed flight, Si2 claims to break several world records, including distance, speed, duration and altitude in the electric airplane category, as well as altitude in the solar airplane category.

During its first part of the journey across the Pacific, Si2 was controlled by André Borschberg in a five-day, five-night flight from Japan to Hawaii last July.

"Solar Impulse is a demonstration of energy efficiency and smart energy management."

Bertrand Piccard began Solar Impulse to promote a pioneering and new spirit, particularly in the fields of renewable energy and clean technologies.

GlobalData Strategic Intelligence

US Tariffs are shifting - will you react or anticipate?

Don’t let policy changes catch you off guard. Stay proactive with real-time data and expert analysis.

By GlobalData

Solar Impulse initiator and chairman Bertrand Piccard said: "Solar Impulse showcases that today exploration is no longer about conquering new territories, because even the moon has already been conquered, but about exploring new ways to have a better quality of life on earth.

"It is more than an airplane: it is a concentration of clean technologies, a genuine flying laboratory, and illustrates that solutions exist today to meet the major challenges facing our society."

The Solar Impulse project has been supported by Solvay, Omega, Schindler, ABB, Google, Altran, Covestro, Swiss Re, Swisscom Moët Hennessy, Masdar and others.

The partners involved in the project are attempting the first round-the-world solar flight with Si2, and latest flight from Hawaii to California is the ninth leg of the round-the-world solar flight that will continue onward to New York, US; Europe or North Africa and Abu Dhabi in the UAE.

The journey started from Abu Dhabi last March.

Solar Impulse CEO and co-founder André Borschberg said: "Solar Impulse is a demonstration of energy efficiency and smart energy management, similar to a flying grid.

"This is what we may be doing in our communities, our cities and our countries. To have a decentralised renewable energy production, using solar, thermal, wind.

"To use efficient ways to store and manage energy, because the times at which we need it is not necessarily the times at which we produce it."


Image: With 17,248 solar cells built into the wing powering the aircraft’s four batteries, Si2 crossed 4,523km across the Pacific. Photo: courtesy of Solar Impulse.

Airport Technology Excellence Awards - Nominations Closed

Nominations are now closed for the Airport Technology Excellence Awards. A big thanks to all the organisations that entered – your response has been outstanding, showcasing exceptional innovation, leadership, and impact.

Excellence in Action
Klayo’s talent and compliance platform tailored for airports has secured the Innovation Award in the Workforce Digitalization category . Learn how its competency gap analysis, integrated compliance hub and data-driven workforce planning are helping airports streamline operations, strengthen governance and engage employees.

Discover the Impact