Brazilian air taxi start-up FlyBIS this week confirmed plans to establish a fleet of Eve Air Mobility's four-passenger eVTOL aircraft. Under a letter of intent signed on December 8, the company agreed to purchase up to 40 of the all-electric vehicles that Eve aims to have certified and ready to enter service in 2026.

FlyBIS, based in Caxias do Sul, has plans to build an urban air mobility network in Brazil initially. Once eVTOL operations are up and running there, the company aims to expand its air taxi services into neighboring countries. 

“This new collaboration with FlyBIS will enable us to expand the future of air mobility to Southern areas of Brazil and other South American countries,” said Eve’s co-CEO Andre Stein. “This region has several high-traffic tourist areas that will benefit from eVTOL operations, reinforcing our commitment to fostering the urban air mobility market in different regions around the world.”

With the new agreement from FlyBIS, Eve now has an order backlog of up to 2,770 eVTOL aircraft—a value of approximately $8 billion—from about two dozen prospective customers. Companies in Eve’s order book include United Airlines, and the Brazilian private aviation charter operator and fractional ownership group Avantto. Eve has said it plans to begin delivering aircraft to its customers in 2026. The public company is still majority-owned by Brazilian aerospace group Embraer.

Eve’s eVTOL is a fully electric, piloted aircraft designed to carry four passengers on short trips of up to 100 kilometers (62 miles). Eventually, the manufacturer aims to switch over to fully autonomous operations, which would free up a seat to allow five passengers to fly in the aircraft.

Author(s)
Body Wordcount
338
Company Reference
Futureflight News Article Reference
Main Image
An artist's rendering of an Eve eVTOL aircraft with a FlyBIS logo flying over Brazil.
Old URL
/news-article/2022-12-08/brazilian-start-flybis-orders-40-eve-evtol-aircraft
Old NID
2328
Old UUID
002568df-ec54-47c8-95fb-7007247263b7
Subhead
FlyBIS aims to operate an urban air mobility network in Brazil and its neighboring countries using Eve's four-seat eVTOL aircraft.
Old Individual Tags
Eve
eVTOL
Brazil
South America
FlyBIS
FF Article Reference Old
91cdbf0b-94af-49d5-8d8b-4cd06aaa5633
90fd4b59-768e-488d-aeff-680a8f85c4c1
316b590e-7493-4f94-bcf1-2b4d2666f73c
6930870f-56f1-4b36-98b6-08fc6ee8704a
21468dd7-e4fe-4174-828e-323a9d1c93c3
Publication Date (intermediate)
AIN Publication Date