EHang, maker of autonomous flying shuttles, files for $100 million IPO

Startups

Chinese autonomous air mobility company EHang has filed with the SEC the paperwork required to go public in the U.S. on the NASDAQ exchange, with a $100 million initial public offering. The company, which has been flying demonstration flights with passengers on board for a while now, is gearing up to launch its first commercial service in Guangzhou after getting approval from local and national regulators to deploy its drones in the area.

At launch, EHang will be using its two-seater vertical take-off and landing craft (VTOL), which has room for two passengers on board. EHang doesn’t just build the aircraft, though – its goal is to build full, multi-aircraft (as many as ‘thousands,’ according to Forbes) autonomous transportation networks that it hopes will serve to alleviate and avoid congested ground traffic. Guangzhou, with an estimated population of over 13 million, suffers from considerable traffic.

EHang is also building out logistics and cargo transportation capabilities as well as passenger services. The company believes it can offers short designate cross-city transportation that can cut down on time by as much as 40 to 60 percent, and once it achieves scale, it also says that costs have the potential to be reduced by as much as 50 percent.

Founded in 2014, EHang last announced funding in 2015, when It raised $42 million in a Series B round led by GP Capital, with GGV Capital, ZhenFund, Lebox Capital, OFC and PreAngel also participating.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Zepto raises another $350M amid retail upheaval in India
Solar power magnate Gautam Adani and others indicted over alleged $250M bribery scheme
OneCell Diagnostics bags $16M to help limit cancer reoccurrence using AI
Anthropic raises another $4B from Amazon, makes AWS its ‘primary’ training partner
Bending Spoons is taking video platform Brightcove private in $233M acquisition

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *