Germany won’t fund eVTOL startup Lilium

Flying taxi developer Lilium will probably not receive a guarantee from the German government. Although German Transport Minister Volker Wissing (FDP) had campaigned in favour of state aid, the budget committee was not convinced. Lilium has been waiting for a final decision for months. (Update below)

Image: Lilium

The German magazine Der Spiegel writes, citing representatives of the budget committee, that there was no agreement last week on a potential 50 million euro loan for Lilium and that the committee will no longer put the issue on the agenda. Lilium has yet to react to the alleged cancellation. The Munich-based startup has long been struggling to obtain a state guarantee for a loan of at least 100 million euros – and had threatened to leave Germany if this did not work out.

The German state of Bavaria pledged 50 million euros in September – on the condition that the federal government would provide support in the same amount. As that is apparently off the table, there is once again a question mark over the Bavarian guarantee. The German press agency dpa quotes Frank Schäffler, the responsible rapporteur for the FDP. “I think it would be wrong to provide aid for Lilium.” The risk for the federal government is far too high – “if Bavaria wants to take on this subsidy, then it should do so alone.”

The current decision was preceded by a so-called due diligence review, which the federal government and the Free State of Bavaria had commissioned the state development bank KfW to carry out. Depending on the outcome, Lilium was to receive a potential state guarantee as collateral for a KfW loan. According to earlier information, Lilium is aiming for a loan volume of at least 100 million euros. Federal Transport Minister Volker Wissing (FDP) is considered to favour the support. His ministry declared in September that it welcomed the Bavarian cabinet’s decision.

From Bavaria, the state government announced that the vote in favour of state support for Lilium was an “industrial policy decision by the Minister President and the entire cabinet.” However, the German state explicitly linked its commitment to a guarantee from the federal government. The coming days and weeks will show how Bavaria will position itself after the presumed cancellation.

Lilium is also likely to make a statement soon. Founded by Technical University of Munich graduates, the startup is developing a vertical take-off electric aeroplane with seven seats. Only in the summer did the company announce a major order from Saudi Arabia with a firm order for 50 eVTOLs. The development of the electric vertical take-off and landing aircraft (eVTOL) is costly. The company employs 850 people at its headquarters in Oberpfaffenhofen near Munich, but has yet to generate any turnover. According to media reports, Lilium has already received 1.5 billion euros from investors and has largely used it up. According to Der Spiegel the capital requirement until the planned type certification in 2026 should be between 300 and 500 million euros. The first manned flight is scheduled for 2025.

Update 18 October 2024

It had already become apparent, now it’s final: The flying taxi developer Lilium will not receive any state funding in Germany – not from the federal government and consequently not from Bavaria either. On Thursday, representatives of the German federal government confirmed that there was no majority in favour of the project. We have summarised further information in this article.

spiegel.de (in German)

7 Comments

about „Germany won’t fund eVTOL startup Lilium“
Shawn Bennett
15.10.2024 um 00:07
Move the corporations to Saudi, or another country that's willing to move forward. Lilium electric jet propulsion is the future of EVTOL's.
Mike
15.10.2024 um 17:38
It's not a jet, that's something the CEO has decided to keep misrepresenting when it's called out.
Jason
17.10.2024 um 16:36
Yes it is a jet. They are technically ducted fan-jet engines. Get with it.
Thomas Blume
15.10.2024 um 10:38
So Germany should invest in Lilium???All their IP resides in a seperate foreign company and with the high disk load philosophy is very inefficient and therefore fairly worthless unless we wait 30 years for suitable batteries. This nonsense university project should have failed years ago.
Faby
15.10.2024 um 18:33
Completely the right decision not to fund that. Lilium is a huge black hole with 1.35 billion debts. Their stock corporation resides in the Netherlands. their IP is not even German based. and now the German society should fund that? although they don't provide partial ownership or shares for that? (Yes I know they requested a loan, but for that risk something in return would be a way).Thx Berlin, great work to stop that Bavarian BS. We already put to much money in funding broke companies and foreign IP.
JoeSchmoe
15.10.2024 um 21:39
Smart move by Germany. This is nothing but a scam or a pipe dream at best.
Carlos Santamaria
17.10.2024 um 20:29
And you, obviously have proof to sustain the status of Scam.

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