• Privacy Policy
  • Advertise with Us
  • Issues Archive
  
No Result
View All Result
Ag Air Update
  • Articles
    • Craymer’s Counsel
    • From the Cockpit
    • International
    • Press Releases
    • Spreading the Facts
    • United States
  • Calendar
  • Current Issue
  • AgAv Marketplace
  • Classifieds
  • Contact Us
Subscribe
AgAir Update
  • Articles
    • Craymer’s Counsel
    • From the Cockpit
    • International
    • Press Releases
    • Spreading the Facts
    • United States
  • Calendar
  • Current Issue
  • AgAv Marketplace
  • Classifieds
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Subscribe
  
AgAir Update
No Result
View All Result
Home UAV

Pyka Bets The Path To The Future Of Passenger Planes Runs Through Banana Plantations In Latin America

by AgAir Update Staff
October 15, 2020
in UAV
Reading Time: 1 min read
Pyka Bets The Path To The Future Of Passenger Planes Runs Through Banana Plantations In Latin America

Oakland-based Pyka shares a goal common to many high-tech California aviation startups: to build an autonomous electric passenger aircraft. However, its first steps to get there have taken the company far away from the pack, first to New Zealand and now to banana plantations in Costa Rica and Ecuador, where it’s preparing to field a robotic crop-spraying airplane called Pelican that CEO Michael Norcia says will prove out technology he believes will lead the way to an era of green, low-cost passenger planes.

The fat-bellied, 500-pound plane can carry more than its weight in liquid pesticides or fertilizer, and is engineered to take off and land in a ridiculously short space: 150 feet, half the length of a football field. Someday that short takeoff and landing capability may enable passenger service to be shoehorned into cities and suburbs in a different way than many other electric aviation startups are envisioning. For now, the 28-year-old Norcia is betting that agriculture is a more practical – and lucrative — avenue to pursue. Pyka says the Pelican will have 50% of the operating costs of manned crop-spraying planes and will remove pilots from harm’s way in a business where skimming fields at 140 miles per hour too often leads to accidents and death. And banana plantations, which are the most frequent users of aerial spraying in the world, may be the perfect environment for it to take wing.

RelatedPosts

Drone-Applied Crop Protection May Face New Labeling Requirements

NAAA Advocates Airspace Safety, Environmental Stewardship Education and Other Professionalism Topics at the 2025 Spray Drone User Conference in Mobile, Alabama

Pyka Unveils Pelican 2: The World’s Largest Autonomous Crop Protection Aircraft

Read more on this story at Forbes.com

Busting the Boozy Myths: What You Think You Know About Alcohol Production May Be Wrong
Spreading the Facts

Busting the Boozy Myths: What You Think You Know About Alcohol Production May Be Wrong

by Michelle Miller
May 1, 2025
Sharping Agricultural Aviation in the U.S. – A Family Driven Partnership
International

Sharping Agricultural Aviation in the U.S. – A Family Driven Partnership

by AgAir Update Staff
May 1, 2025
Wing and a Prayer – Learning To Have Contentment In Our Everyday Life
Wing and a Prayer

Wing and a Prayer – Being Led By The Holy Spirit In Our Daily Life

by Carlin Lawrence
May 1, 2025
Craymer’s Counsel – Fuel Nozzles
Craymer's Counsel

Craymer’s Counsel – Fuel Nozzles

by Robert Craymer
May 1, 2025
AgAir Update

© 2025 AgAir Update, a Marsayl Media Publication. All rights Reserved.

Navigate Site

  • Home
  • Advertise with Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Advertise with Us
  • Calendar
  • Classifieds
  • Contact Us
  • Current Issue
  • Marketplace
  • Start or Renew Your Subscription

© 2025 AgAir Update, a Marsayl Media Publication. All rights Reserved.

Skip to content
Open toolbar Accessibility Tools

Accessibility Tools

  • Increase TextIncrease Text
  • Decrease TextDecrease Text
  • GrayscaleGrayscale
  • High ContrastHigh Contrast
  • Negative ContrastNegative Contrast
  • Light BackgroundLight Background
  • Links UnderlineLinks Underline
  • Readable FontReadable Font
  • Reset Reset