Flying taxi startup Lilium faces significant risk of going bankrupt or shutting down if it can’t raise additional funds.
Two of its principal subsidiaries will file for insolvency and apply for self-administration, follows failed loan efforts ...
The Lilium Jet, priced at $10 million, was scheduled to take its first planned flight in early 2025. The company had promised ...
Thales and the Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics have achieved a new milestone in nuclear fusion by setting a world ...
A German flying taxi pioneer that was once valued at more than €3bn (£2.5bn ...
Seven years after its first test flight, German electric air taxi manufacturer Lilium has run out of funding and filed for ...
VTOL developer Lilium has confirmed that two of its principal subsidiaries will file for insolvency and apply for ...
Lilium and GE Aerospace partner on eVTOL safety data monitoring with advanced flight analytics: critical insights for eVTOL operators ...
Follows German parliament's Budget Committee not approving a loan guarantee that was a condition precedent to a private fundraiseCompany was also unable to reach an agreement in principle with Bavaria ...
Munich-based Lilium, the developer of the first all-electric vertical take-off and landing (“eVTOL”) aircraft, announced that is planning to apply for self-administration proceedings in a German court ...
Federal regulators have cleared the path for electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft to share U.S. airspace with ...
Lilium’s stock nosedives over 55% as two key subsidiaries face insolvency. The aerospace startup struggles to secure state ...