Windracers and HITRANS to expand Highlands and Islands drone air cargo

Above: (right-left) Windracers Project Manager Scotland Lukas Princ, Windracers CEO, Simon Muderack, HITRANS Partnership Director, Ranald Robertson and HITRANS Sustainable Aviation Development Manager, Dawn Gillies.
Courtesy Windracers
The Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) will see Windracers work closely with HITRANS to identify use cases where unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) can deliver social, economic and environmental benefits for people and businesses across the Highlands and Islands of Scotland.
This partnership has been enabled by ongoing support from Innovate UK, whose Sustainable Aviation Test Environment (SATE) programme brought Windracers and HITRANS together through a series of funded operations to demonstrate how UAS cargo can address transport challenges in remote regions. The MoU marks the next step in that relationship, moving from programme led collaboration towards a long term, locally led operational model.
Welcoming the MoU signing at HITRANS headquarters in Inverness this week, Windracers CEO Simon Muderack said: “Our partnership with HITRANS builds on five years of safe ULTRA operations across the Highlands and Islands and on the progress made through the Innovate UK Future Flight Challenge.
“By working closely with local partners, we can now take the next step towards a world first: a regularly scheduled commercial autonomous air cargo service that complements existing transport and delivers lasting benefits for communities and businesses across the region.”
Together, the agreement reflects a shared focus on how autonomous aviation can respond to the specific transport needs of remote and rural regions.
HITRANS Partnership Director Ranald Robertson said: “The Highlands and Islands is uniquely placed for this work, with much of the region characterised by dispersed populations and remote and rural communities and services.
“The region is therefore dependent on aviation for access to key services such as employment, education, healthcare and social and leisure activities.
“These pioneering UAS projects could bring improvements for residents and visitors, as well as revolutionising logistics for businesses and healthcare by by-passing traditional transport bottlenecks.
“In future, it could help with the rapid delivery of medicines, significantly helping patients, and also assist high-value, time-sensitive industries such as seafood and aquaculture, where delays can drastically impact product quality and economic viability.”
The partnership also highlights the role of public funding in supporting the transition of proven drone capability into long-term UAS operations within the UK.
Simon Masters, Deputy Director - Future Flight, Innovate UK said: “This exciting partnership between Windracers and HITRANS marks real progress for the UK's readiness to adopt new aviation technologies. As home-grown Future Flight technologies, supported by Innovate UK, move from research and development into commercialisation and scale, they are poised to deliver transformative impact, connecting remote communities and improving access to vital services across the UK.”
The collaboration between HITRANS and Windracers supports the objectives of the UK Government’s Future Flight Programme and the Civil Aviation Authority’s Airspace Modernisation Strategy, enabling the practical integration of UAS services.