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Flight in solar plane sets off over Pacific from China to Hawaii

WATCH ABOVE: A Swiss pilot of a solar plane on Sunday embarked on the longest leg of the first attempt to fly around the world without a drop of fuel.

BEIJING – A Swiss pilot of a solar plane on Sunday embarked on the longest leg of the first attempt to fly around the world without a drop of fuel.

Andre Borschberg took off from Nanjing, China, at 2:39 a.m. Sunday in the Solar Impulse 2 for a five-day-five-night flight to Hawaii across the Pacific Ocean.

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The journey started in March in Abu Dhabi, and the solar plane has stopped in Oman, India, Myanmar and China. The 8,175-kilometre flight from Nanjing to Hawaii is the seventh of 12 flights and the longest and most dangerous.

READ MORE: Solar-powered plane begins attempt to fly around the world

Borschberg and another Swiss pilot, Bertrand Piccard, have been taking turns flying the single-seater Swiss plane during a five-month journey to promote renewable energy use.

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“This is the moment of truth,” Borschberg, 62, said before takeoff.

He said that if successful, the flight to Hawaii will demonstrate the credibility of the vision he and Piccard embraced 16 years ago “to change our mindset regarding the enormous potential of clean technologies and renewable energies.”

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