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Electric Beta Alia CTOL Aircraft Completes First Royal Mail Delivery Flight in the U.K.

Royal Mail tests electric aircraft to deliver mail and parcels to remote regions across Scotland.

Electric Beta Alia CTOL Aircraft Completes First Royal Mail Delivery Flight in the U.K.

Electric aviation is beginning to enter real-world logistics. U.S. company Beta Technologies has started introducing its Beta Alia CTOL into the United Kingdom’s postal delivery network, marking a major step toward lower-emission cargo transport.

The aircraft has already completed a test route between Glasgow and Dundee, demonstrating how electric aviation could change deliveries to hard-to-reach areas across the country.

On March 20, 2026, the Alia CTOL carried mail on that route, becoming the first fully electric aircraft used operationally for the U.K.’s national postal service, Royal Mail. The flight was coordinated by regional airline Loganair, Royal Mail, and Beta Technologies.

Additional test routes are already planned. Over the next several months, the aircraft will also operate on flights connecting Aberdeen, Inverness, Wick, and the Orkney Islands.

The idea is to mirror existing Loganair routes that already deliver letters and packages daily to some of Scotland’s most remote communities, including island territories. These trials are part of Royal Mail’s long-term environmental strategy aimed at achieving net-zero emissions by 2040.

As part of that plan, the postal service first reduced domestic cargo flights, then began deploying electric delivery vans and drones. Now it’s experimenting with fully electric aircraft.

Adopting electric transport in postal logistics is not a small task. Royal Mail serves roughly 32 million addresses across the U.K., including remote islands where deliveries depend on a complex combination of roads, ferries, and aircraft. A versatile electric plane capable of operating on existing routes could significantly reduce both fuel costs and carbon emissions.

The Alia CTOL stands out among electric aircraft currently under development. It can carry about 1,235 pounds of cargo and has a range of roughly 387 miles, making it well suited for the Scottish regional routes already used by Loganair.

Another advantage is that the aircraft can take off and land at existing airports, meaning new infrastructure isn’t required. Charging is also relatively quick: using Beta’s proprietary charging stations, the aircraft can be fully recharged in about 20 to 40 minutes.

Beta Technologies has become one of the key players in the emerging electric aviation sector, particularly in the development of both CTOL and eVTOL aircraft as well as the charging infrastructure needed to support them. The company is also heavily involved in government pilot programs exploring how electric aircraft could integrate into national airspace systems.

In the United States, Beta participates in several projects tied to the Federal Aviation Administration and the United States Department of Transportation, including initiatives under the eVTOL Integration Pilot Program. These programs test not only the Alia aircraft themselves but also the ground charging networks needed to support future fleets of electric aircraft.

If the Scottish postal trials prove successful, electric cargo planes like the Alia CTOL could soon become a common sight in regional logistics networks—potentially reshaping how mail and small freight move between cities and remote communities.


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