"I speak to you from the cockpit of Solar Impulse in the middle of the Pacific, flying only on solar power. No fuel," pilot Bertrand Piccard told UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon yesterday during a brief conversation streamed live on his aircraft's website.
Ban hailed Piccard's pioneering spirit as "inspirational," telling him he was making history.
Piccard responded that Ban, too, was making history by having just presided over the signing of a climate agreement supported by representatives of 175 nations.
Earlier, Piccard had watched in fascination from his plane as the sun, which is powering his aircraft's batteries, rose over the ocean on Friday, which is also Earth Day. "Absolutely fantastic moment ... That's a sunrise I will remember all my life," he said.
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After uncertainty about winds, the plane took off from Hawaii on Thursday morning and was on course to land in Mountain View, California, over the weekend. The crew that helped it take off was clearing out of its Hawaiian hangar and headed for the mainland for the weekend arrival.
At one point passengers on a Hawaiian Air jet caught a glimpse of the Solar Impulse 2 before the airliner sped past the slow-moving aircraft.
The Solar Impulse 2 landed in Hawaii in July and was forced to stay in the islands after the plane's battery system sustained heat damage on its trip from Japan.