Fans of Solar Impulse 2, the SunPower®  solar cell powered airplane, are celebrating the plane’s safe landing in Hawaii today following the most dangerous leg of its around-the-world journey: more than 5,000 miles across the Pacific Ocean without a drop of fuel.

The trip from Japan to Hawaii broke world records for longest solo and solar flight when pilot André Borschberg landed at Kaleoloa Airport on O’hau after flying five days nonstop.

“Congrats to the Solar Impulse pioneers,” said SunPower CEO Tom Werner. “SunPower is proud that our solar cells helped power this flight on its unprecedented journey, making aviation history.”

How fitting that the plane, a project born in Switzerland to Borschberg and his partner Bertrand Piccard, landed on American soil on the eve of our Independence Day.

Borschberg, Piccard and their support team have been unwavering in demonstrating the kind of adventurous spirit that characterizes our country and its founders and that typifies the groundbreaking innovation that 30-year-old SunPower was founded upon.

As Piccard Tweeted recently, “Energy efficiency, solar power and modern technology can achieve the impossible.”

At moments completing this perilous flight seemed impossible. The Hawaii flight had originated in China but was unexpectedly grounded for three weeks in Japan due to poor weather. All eyes were on the Solar Impulse team, wondering if the journey, which originated in Monaco in March, would have to be put on hold indefinitely.

One attempt to take off from Japan, watched live online by the world, was aborted at the last minute, and the stress and disappointment faced by all was palpable.

Their caution was understandable as the dangers to the pilot and aircraft were all too real. If the plane hit bad weather over the vast Pacific, Borschberg would have nowhere to land. He might of had to ditch the plane and escape via parachute into a life raft.

Yet the team members persevered, working day and night to find a safe weather window for the plane to fly.

Their determination was admirable and brings to mind many explorers from before, especially Amelia Earhart, the first woman aviator to cross the Atlantic solo. It’s bittersweet to note that the July 2, 1937 anniversary of Earhart’s disappearance over the South Pacific occurred on one of the most difficult days of Borschberg’s flight, as he faced exhaustion and turbulence while trying to find a safe spot to cross a cold front. We hope Borschberg’s success honors her memory.

The theme of freedom rings true. Freedom to do what no one has done before: Fly alone for days in a cold cramped unpressurized cockpit to tell the world that the free power of the sun means what the hashtag on the plane's fuselage clearly states: #TheFutureisClean.

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Posted
AuthorKari Hulac