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Japan airport readies for Solar Impulse unscheduled stop

The super-lightweight plane, which is covered in solar panels, had spent much of the day in a holding pattern over the Sea of Japan as organisers examined forecasts on the projected flight path

Solar Impulse

Bertrand Piccard, the initiator, chairman and pilot of Solar Impulse, points Japan on the map at the Mission Control Center for the Solar Impulse flight in Monaco.

AFPPTI Nagoya (Japan)
An airport in Japan was today readying to welcome Solar Impulse 2 on an unscheduled stop after mission controllers decided the weather was not right for the sun-powered plane to cross the vast Pacific Ocean.

The record-breaking aircraft was set to touch down in central Japan around 1400 GMT, the team said on its website.

"On my way to Nagoya disappointed for not continuing but very thankful to the Japanese authorities for their support," pilot Andre Borschberg Tweeted.

The seventh leg of the round-the-world journey was set to take 62-year-old Borschberg on a six-day, six-night flight from the Chinese city of Nanjing across the Pacific to Hawaii, a distance of some 8,500 kilometres.
 
The super-lightweight plane, which is covered in solar panels, had spent much of the day in a holding pattern over the Sea of Japan as organisers examined forecasts on the projected flight path.

"Weather deteriorating over Pacific, decision taken for intermediate landing in Nagoya and wait for better conditions," tweeted Bertrand Piccard, the initiator of the mission.

"When we took off from China it was quite clear we could cross the front," Piccard said on a live video posted on YouTube.

"It was almost easy, I would say, the weatherman was very confident.

"Now the window has closed. The (weather) front is too thick, too big. The plane would have to go through big layers of cloud.

"The only safe decision is to stop in Nagoya, wait a few days before carrying on."

The flight from China had already notched up Solar Impulse 2's first overnight leg, with the aircraft relying solely on batteries charged by the sun's energy.

The flight from Nanjing to Hawaii was scheduled to be the longest section of the maiden solar-powered global circumnavigation, an attempt to promote green energy.

The journey began in Abu Dhabi in March and was originally intended to be for 12 legs, with a total flight time of around 25 days.

Speaking on Saturday hours before the departure from Nanjing, Borschberg told reporters the plane could land in Japan in case of technical problems, but the open ocean offers no such possibility.

"In case of emergency, we have Japan on the way, so we have identified airports where we could stop but this only really is in case of very difficult technical problems," Borschberg previously said.

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First Published: Jun 01 2015 | 5:48 PM IST

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