XPENG AEROHT
One of dozens of aerial automobiles currently in development, the XPeng X2 electric flying car completed its first public test flight in Dubai at the Gitex 2022 technology expo.
GITEX 2022
Chinese company XPeng Aeroht hopes to have a flying vehicle available for public use in small regulated urban areas within just five years.
KARIM SAHIB/AFP/AFP via Getty Images
SkyDrive's single passenger flying car, designed to be a zero-emission flying craft, was also on display at Gitex.
JOE KLAMAR/AFP/AFP via Getty Images
Also in development is this air taxi from Chinese company Ehang. After several successful public test flights, it's hoped the Ehang 216 will be ready by 2025, when the Chinese government plans to have flying taxis in the air.
ALEXANDER NEMENOV/AFP/AFP via Getty Images
Hoversurf's Drone Taxi prototype took its first test flight in 2021, and the company hopes to have it in city skies by 2025. Hoversurf is also working on plans for a Drone Ambulance.
ANTHONY WALLACE/AFP/AFP via Getty Images
The German Volocopter 2X takes a different approach to the flying car challenge. Technically a multirotor electric helicopter, the vehicle is intended to act as an aerial taxi in built-up urban areas.
LIONEL BONAVENTURE/AFP/AFP via Getty Images
The CityAirbus NextGen prototype is an all-electric vertical take-off and landing (eVTOL) vehicle. What sets it apart from many other vehicles for urban flight is that it has room for four passengers rather than one or two.
CHRISTOF STACHE/AFP/AFP via Getty Images
The Lilium Evtol Jet is designed to be a hovering minibus. It takes off vertically but cruises through the air on wings and uses electric jet propulsion.
Mathieu Lewis-Rolland/Getty Images North America/Getty Images
Israeli-founded company Eviation Aircraft has developed and successfully flown Alice, the world's first electric passenger aircraft intended for commuter travel.
CNN  — 

Towards the end of the 1985 sci-fi classic “Back to the Future,” the archetypal mad inventor Doc Brown announces “where we’re going, we don’t need roads” as the time-travelling DeLorean lifts into the air. Whilst flying cars aren’t yet filling our skies, a number are in development. Last week the Chinese XPeng X2 successfully completed the first public test flight of its two-seater flying car at GITEX technology expo in Dubai – and it even shares the DeLorean’s famous gull-wing door design.

The XPeng X2 lifts vertically off the ground using eight propellers, without need for a runway and is therefore suitable for built-up urban areas. The vehicle, designed to carry two passengers, is fully electric and its makers say it can rise through the air at around two meters per second and reach speeds of up to 80 miles per hour.

Although the test flight lasted just 90 seconds, according to Liu Xinyin, chief aviation specialist at XPeng Aeroht, the technology is close to being ready for public use, but regulations around flying cars are still some way off.

XPeng plans to work with governments to establish a physical regulatory infrastructure for flying cars in urban areas, and Liu believes that people will be able to use the flying cars within limited regulated spaces in just five years. This lines up pretty well with ambitious plans from the Chinese government to launch flying taxis by 2025.

XPENG AEROHT
The company behind the XPeng X2 is hopeful that flying cars will be available for public use in just five years.

If flying wasn’t futuristic enough, the XPeng X2 is equipped with AI automation – it can be driven manually or it can be set to self-drive. “It learns how to avoid traffic, avoid buildings and people,” says Liu.

The self-driving elements pose further difficulties with regulation, and also throw into question public acceptance. Many people are still concerned with safety issues around self-driving cars on the ground, let alone vehicles that are zooming around above their heads. However, XPeng says it’s safer for its flying car is to be self-driving than to be driven by a human.

There are dozens of flying cars currently in development around the world, and many of them actually fly, like Canadian firm Opener’s “BlackFly,” SkyDrive Inc’s “SD-03” and Klein Vision’s prototype “AirCar” – which made a successful 35-minute test-flight between two cities in Slovakia last year.

The benefits of flying cars like the XPeng X2 are further reaching than just realizing wild pop-culture dreams. Advocates say flying cars could revolutionize urban transport, making roads less busy and therefore safer for pedestrians and cyclists, and for electric vehicles like the XPeng X2, also reduce carbon emissions.