The Future of Vertical Mobility

Sizing the market for passenger, inspection, and goods services until 2035
Gregor Grandl | Dr. Martin Ostgathe | Dr. Jan Cachay | Stefan Doppler | John Salib | Han Ross
Mar 2018 | Study | English

The Future of Vertical Mobility

Sizing the market for passenger, inspection, and goods services until 2035

The study “The Future of Vertical Mobility” by Porsche Consulting management consultancy provides a thorough and wide-ranging analysis of the feasibility of vertical mobility. It is sizing the market for passenger, inspection, and goods services until 2035

Vertical mobility offers mankind a serious shot at turning the dream of flying into a reality for everyone, and inspection, goods, and passenger services have the potential to become a global market worth $74 billion by 2035. We answer three key questions raised by the new mobility landscape: What is the market potential in 2035? What are basic, conservative, and progressive market scenarios to get there? What are the opportunities for customers, cities, manufacturers, operators, and investors?

$74

billion is the projected 2035 market size 2035 for drones and supporting services.

45%

of the projected market in 2035 is in the Asia Pacific region.

10x

less expensive is a eVTOL compared to a helicopter.

Management Summary
  • It is important to add a fact-based foundation to the hype around vertical mobility, which inspires the public’s imagination as the first passenger drones are tested
  • We want to offer pragmatic and neutral analysis following our mission to “think strategically and act pragmatically”
  • Share our findings with the ecosystem of companies and startups, city governments, and the public, as well as aerospace and other regulatory entities

Read the whole study now

Contact

Consulting that works

You want to get in touch with our experts? Reach out to us.

Insights

Trends & Solutions

Reshaping Aviation to Build New Competitiveness

How airlines and airports can master business transformation and safeguard future viability

Mastering Global Airport Competition

Increasing airport attractiveness through successful collaboration

The True Cost of a Flight

Limits to the cheap-flight strategy

Filter

Industries

Practices