Windracers, the British drone engineering and manufacturing company, today announced that the University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF) has commenced flights in Alaska using Windracers ULTRA, the world’s most accomplished dual-use heavy-lift drone, to pioneer the delivery of essential supplies to remote communities.

Earlier this year UAF announced it had secured multiple Windracers ULTRAs for Beyond Visual Line of Sight (BVLOS) flights to remote communities across Alaska. The region is home to more than 200 remote communities that depend on air transport for essential supplies.
“Air cargo delivery to our remote communities is vital to life in Alaska, so we purchased the Windracers ULTRA aircraft to test how large unmanned aircraft can be safely used by Alaska air carriers to provide medical supplies and cargo to these communities,” Alaska Center for Unmanned Aircraft Systems Integration Director and UAF Professor Cathy Cahill said.
“We need aircraft that can safely cover long distances, carry a significant weight of cargo or emergency supplies and do so reliably and regularly,” she said.
“Our goal is to create an environment for the commercial sector in which unmanned aircraft become a routine sight in Alaska’s skies.”
Windracers Chief Flight Operations Officer Rob Datson said: “Windracers is proud to support the University of Alaska Fairbanks as they put their Windracers ULTRAs to work conducting missions in one of the world’s most demanding environments.
“The Fairbanks team are truly experts in the use of advanced drone technolog