Royal Mail is building a fleet of 500 drones to carry mail to remote communities all over the UK, including the Isles of Scilly and the Hebrides.
The postal service, which has already conducted successful trials over Scotland and Cornwall, will create more than 50 new postal drone routes over the next three years as part of a new partnership with London company Windracers.
Drones, or UAVs (uncrewed aerial vehicles), can help reduce carbon emissions and improve the reliability of island mail services, Royal Mail claims.
They offer an alternative to currently-used delivery methods that can be affected by bad weather – ferries, conventional aircraft and land-based deliveries.
They can also take off from any flat surface (sand, grass or tarmac) providing it is long enough.
Drones are usually thought of as small devices, but each of Royal Mail’s craft have a hefty wingspan of over 30 feet (10 metres).
Royal Mail is building a fleet of 500 drones to carry mail to remote communities in the UK including the Isles of Scilly and the Hebrides. Royal Mail has already conducted four drone trials over the last 18 months. The most recent one was in the Shetland Islands
Drones are usually thought of as small devices, but each of Royal Mail’s craft have a hefty wingspan of over 30 feet (10 metres)
The first routes identified for the new service include the Isles of Scilly, Shetland Islands, Orkney Islands and the Hebrides, although plans will be subject to approval by the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA).
‘On time delivery regardless of our customers location or the weather, whilst protecting our environment is our goal,’ said Simon Thompson, chief executive officer at Royal Mail.
‘Even though we go everywhere, Royal Mail already has the lowest CO2 emissions per parcel delivered, this initiative will help reduce our emissions even further.’
Each twin-engine UAV has a 32-foot wingspan and incorporates a ‘high-reliability’ autopilot system.
They can carry up to 100kg of mail of all shapes and sizes for two daily return flights between the islands.
After being picked up from the landing sites, letters and parcels are then delivered by the local postie in his or her van – so human workers aren’t being completely replaced quite yet.
Royal Mail wants to secure more than 50 drone routes supported by up to 200 drones over the next three years.
But longer term, the ambition is to deploy a fleet of more than 500 drones servicing all corners of the UK.
Chris Paxton, head of drone trials at Royal Mail, told the BBC that the drones were originally designed to deliver aid in Africa.
The postal service will create more than 50 new postal drone routes over the next three years, as part of a new partnership with logistics drone company Windracers
After being picked up from the landing sites, letters and parcels are then delivered by the local postie in his or her van
They are much like a small plane, except that they don’t have a pilot on board, and fly a programmed route autonomously, based on an inputted postcode.
The drones are monitored along the way to ensure they are completely safe; there are safety pilots at either end of the route too who are able to take control of the drone if needed.
The drones are also less likely to be affected by bad weather such as fog and heavy rain than conventional aircraft.
‘There is no need for the pilot to be able to see where they’re going, which means they can fly in fog,’ Paxton said.
‘And because they’re flying rather than going on the sea, they’re also not relying on tides.’
Royal Mail has already conducted four drone trials over the last 18 months; the last one over the Shetland Islands in April carried mail between Tingwall Airport in Lerwick to Unst – a 50-mile flight each way.
Royal Mail wants to secure more than 50 drone routes supported by up to 200 drones over the next three years. But longer term, the ambition is to deploy a fleet of more than 500 drones servicing all corners of the UK
In May 2021, Royal Mail conducted a one-month trial from the Cornish mainland to the Isles of Scilly, using a larger fixed wing UAV to deliver essential mail, PPE and Covid testing kits to the islands
Unst has a population of around 630 people and is Britain’s most northerly inhabited island.
The other trials involved flights on the Isle of Mull in Scotland, Isles of Scilly off the Cornish coast and between Kirkwall and North Ronaldsay on the Orkney Islands back in October.
Royal Mail made the UK’s first drone package delivery the on the Isle of Mull in 2020, using a much smaller device.
The single package – a jumper from Selfridges – was carried in the body of a small Skyports UAV to a remote lighthouse in Tobermory.
In October, Royal Mail started a two-week test of scheduled, autonomous flights between Kirkwall and North Ronaldsay in the Orkney Islands in conjunction with Windracers Ltd
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