Beta technologies Alia eCTOL

Beta Technologies Partners with Autonomous Expert, Near Earth Autonomy

There are more solutions than obstacles. Nicolas Zart

Electric aircraft maker Beta Technologies is working with Pennsylvania‑based Near Earth Autonomy to enable autonomous flight capacity to its line of electric and hybrid‑electric aircraft. This partnership highlights the trend in the advanced air mobility (AAM) industry to develop or team up with autonomy specialists.

Autonomous Aircraft, The Next AAM Step

Although Beta announced it has been developing and flying autonomous capabilities for several years, with more than 1,000 hours of uncrewed flights, it shows the company can fly more than 158 nautical miles on a single charge, even without a pilot on board.

Beta hopes adding autonomous capabilities will make its aircraft more attractive to military and commercial cargo customers. Shawn Hall, Beta’s chief revenue officer, said that modern defense and civil sectors need mobility platforms that are smarter, more flexible, and able to operate where traditional aircraft cannot. He added that increasing autonomy will give operators more options, including faster speed, higher payload, longer range, and the ability to fly with or without a pilot.

Near Earth Autonomy develops autonomous flight control systems for aircraft, including eVTOLs, helicopters, and drones. The company has already demonstrated its technology on a modified Leonardo AW139 helicopter. Sanjiv Singh, CEO of Near Earth, said this collaboration builds on Near Earth’s proven work in bringing Responsive Uncrewed Capability (RUC) to helicopters, such as converting the UH‑60L Black Hawk into the RUC‑60, which can operate without an onboard pilot. By using that experience, Near Earth will help integrate advanced autonomy into Beta’s ALIA aircraft for safe, efficient, and scalable operations across many missions.

This news follows similar autonomy announcements from other major eVTOL companies. In June 2024, Joby Aviation acquired Xwing, an autonomous flight control systems developer, bringing its Superpilot software in‑house. In September 2025, Joby demonstrated Superpilot for the first time onboard a Cessna 208 during a U.S. defense exercise over the Pacific Ocean and Hawaii.

In August 2023, Archer Aviation settled with Wisk and its parent company, Boeing. As part of that deal, Archer agreed to make Wisk its exclusive provider of autonomy technology for future variants of Archer’s aircraft. Boeing also made an investment in Archer to help integrate those autonomous systems.

Beyond autonomy, all three companies have also recently announced hybrid‑electric aircraft development. Archer partnered with Anduril in December 2024, Joby teamed up with L3Harris in August 2025, and Beta formed a strategic partnership with GE Aerospace in September 2025 to accelerate hybrid‑electric aviation. Despite differences in design and business model, these companies are all developing clean‑sheet aircraft of a similar type during a disruptive period in aviation. The fact that they are all exploring similar partnerships and technologies is likely a result of that shared environment.

These moves add to the sense that the eVTOL and advanced air mobility sector is in an arms race, at least in terms of capability and speed of development. While none of the companies will openly call it an arms race, the pattern of announcements suggests that each is trying to stay ahead in autonomy, range, payload, and operational flexibility.

Beta’s unique position

What sets Beta apart is that it is the only company in this group that already has two eCTOL aircraft flying commercially with a private operator. Beta’s ALIA aircraft, originally designed as an eVTOL, has been pivoted into an eCTOL configuration, allowing it to operate from conventional runways. This gives operators more flexibility in where and how they can use the aircraft.

Beta also has a growing ecosystem that supports its aircraft in daily operations. The company has built two types of charging stations: a smaller, more compact unit and a faster, higher‑power unit. These stations are already in use at Beta’s own facilities and with early operators, helping to prove the practical side of electric aviation on the ground.

This combination — two eCTOLs flying commercially, a proven charging network, and now a strong push into autonomy with Near Earth — positions Beta as a company that is not just developing technology, but also building a real‑world operational model. For aviation professionals, this suggests that Beta is focused on solving the full picture: aircraft design, propulsion, charging infrastructure, and now uncrewed operations.

The Inevitability of AAM’s Autonomous Future

AAM has always said it was moving toward more autonomous, with electric and hybrid‑electric. Partnerships like Beta’s with Near Earth will continue through 2026. For operators and regulators, the key remains to focus on safety, certification, and how these systems integrate into existing airspace and logistics networks. Beta’s approach — combining in‑house development with strategic partnerships and a practical ecosystem — may offer a useful blueprint for others in the sector.

Beta technologies Alia eCTOL
Beta technologies Alia eCTOL
Come and meet Nicolas Zart in Ras Al Khaiman, UAE on February 27th, 2024.

AAM Innovation and a Flurry of Patents over a Decade

Perfect timing as I prepare to deliver another keynote at the Arab Aviation Summit next week on the topic of electric propulsion innovations and how they are shaping the future of advanced air mobility (AAM). Please join us in Ras Al Khaimah, UAE on the 27th and 28th of February 2024.

Come and meet Nicolas Zart in Ras Al Khaiman, UAE on February 27th, 2024.

In the meantime, Lufthansa Innovation Hub wrote about how over the last 14 years, the AAM industry filed an unprecedented 760 patent filings record.

AAM Innovators Lufthansa Innovation Hub https://tnmt.com/the-2024-aam-landscape/

AAM Innovations Point to a Maturing Industry

These developments are a sign that the industry is not only gaining momentum, but has reached the critical maturity level. With a recent rise in patent in the AAM sector, the data since 2022 shows how these innovation are shaping the future of AAM.

Lufthansa Innovation Hub https://tnmt.com/the-2024-aam-landscape/

The chart above chart shows how the US accounts for the majority of patent filings with in 2022, 60% of all AAM patents originated from the U.S., up 71% by 2023 and solidifies the country’s role internationally. China holds the second patent filing spot, but saw its share halve from 16% in 2022 to just 8% in 2023. Europe saw a decline to only 7% of the total patents filed in 2023. Lilium, ranking fifth and representing the forefront of European AAM innovation, significantly expanded its patent portfolio in 2023.

Three U.S. companies stand above here, Joby Aviation, Wisk Aero, and Beta Air with Ips. Specifically, Last year alone, Beta Air has filed for more patents than any other company within a single year.

This also has attracted traditional aerospace stakeholders such as Honeywell and BEA Systems drawing from their other industry experience.

Collaboration runs high these days, another testament of industry maturity. Archer and Wisk Aero, under the OK of Boeing, are working together. We will see more collaborations happen.

As the chart illustrates, the category known as “Power and Magic Movers,” predominantly focused on propulsion and energy systems, leads not just in the volume of patent filings for both 2022 and 2023 but also showcases the most significant uptick in intellectual property (IP) activities.

A New Urban Mobility Index

A new urban mobility index from The Oliver Wyman Forum, in partnership with the University of California, Berkeley, published its fifth Urban Mobility Readiness Index, ranks 65 major cities worldwide on their preparedness for mobility’s next chapter.

Stay tuned for more that we are officially live!