Swiss test pilot makes world's 1st jump from solar-powered plane
Swiss adventurer Raphael Domjan jumps from the SolarStratos solar-powered aircraft prototype with Spanish test pilot Miguel A. Iturmendi aboard, at the airbase in Payerne, Switzerland, August 25, 2020. (Reuters Photo)


A parachutist completed the world's first jump from a solar-powered aircraft on Tuesday after the plane soared to a height of 1,520 meters (nearly 5,000 feet) over western Switzerland, Swiss organizers said.

The two-seater prototype plane made the test flight in good weather to promote renewable energy. Parachutist Raphael Domjan reached a speed of 150 kilometers per hour during his jump, landing near the project base in Payerne.

"Today there were many firsts but the most important is (this is) the first time ever that someone jumped from an electric aircraft. And this is something that is changing the future for this sport for skydivers," said Domjan, the instigator of the SolarStratos project and who co-piloted the plane.

Project instigator Raphael Domjan jumps with a parachute from the SolarStratos aircraft, a solar-powered two-seater aircraft, in Payerne, Switzerland August 25, 2020. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
Project instigator Raphael Domjan reacts upon landing after he jumped with a parachute from the SolarStratos aircraft, a solar-powered two-seater aircraft, in Payerne, Switzerland August 25, 2020. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse

"It was the first time we did a solar skydive, I climbed with the energy coming from the solar cells of the plane," he said.

In 2022, the team aims to carry out a high-altitude flight powered exclusively by solar energy, seeking to reach the stratosphere with an altitude of 20,000 meters.