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World’s biggest plane ‘Skytanic’ will take to the skies by 2030 that can carry 12x more than a Boeing 747

Published on April 30, 2025 at 12:50 PM

THE world’s biggest plane dubbed “Skytanic”; will finally take to the skies by 2030 and begin transporting its enormous cargo.

Officially called will be able to carry 12-times more than a Boeing 747 – and has one very specific purpose.

Illustration of the Radia Windrunner, a large cargo plane, flying over a mountainous desert.
WindRunner is set to become the world’s largest plane
Illustration of a large cargo plane loading a wind turbine blade at night.
It has been specially designed to be able to carry wind turbine blades
Illustration of the world's largest cargo plane, the Radia WindRunner, on a runway near wind turbines.
Radia, the company building the whopper, hopes it will be in the skies by 2030

Illustration of the Skytanic Windrunner, the world's biggest plane, with specifications.

WindRunner will clock in at an incredible 356ft – longer than the pitch at – and will be 79ft tall.

The company behind it, Radia, has already been working on the plans for almost a decade.

While it will be a versatile vehicle, the size and shape of WindRunner have been carefully designed to accommodate one specific item: wind turbines.

Wind turbine blades are enormous and incredibly tricky to on roads, and normal planes are too small to handle them.

Some turbine projects have even needed special roads to be laid to get the blades there.

And the blades are expected to get even bigger in the future – possibly growing from 230ft to 330ft.

So, with the help of rocket scientist CEO Mark Lundstrom, the Radia team looked for a solution.

WindRunner will be able to carry whole blades in its cargo space, and fly them right to the construction site.

To make landing easier, the plane has been designed so that it can touch down on short, dirt runways – rather than requiring a fully operational airport.

Radia said: “WindRunner’s unique capabilities not only allow it to meet the requirements of today’s airlift missions but also allow it to open the aperture of what is possible to move by air.”;

Radia hopes to have WindRunner in the skies by 2030.

When it takes off for the first time, it will be the biggest-ever plane to do so.

The second-largest was a Ukrainian jet called Mriya, meaning “the dream”;, which was destroyed by at the beginning of its invasion.

And WindRunner will have uses beyond just transporting wind turbine blades – opening up new transport opportunities to industries from to defence.

Illustration of a large cargo plane transporting a wind turbine blade in a desert landscape with several wind turbines.

Illustration of wind turbines in a desert with a large aircraft in the center.
The team hopes the plane will allow larger wind turbines to be built in the future

CEO Lundstrom said: “There’s an entire other classification of big things that have not yet been invented.

“The engineers of the world, and the product development people of the world, don’t even try to invent bigger things if they know that they can never be transported.”;

THE POWER OF WIND TURBINES

Offshore wind turbine blades are among the world’s longest items, and, currently, the largest of them can only be transported by enormous boats.

The blades are made of fibreglass-reinforcedpolyester or epoxy which, in such large quantities, weighs an awful lot.

The heaviest blades can come in at a staggering 26,000kg.

Illustration of a large cargo plane in a hangar.
WindRunner will have a capacity 12 times the size of a Boeing 747
Illustration of a large wind turbine blade being transported on a truck at night.
The plane will offer a solution to the very difficult transport of wind turbines by road

With the WindRunner’s unprecedented size, engineers will be able to build even bigger.

These longer blades could produce double the amount of current onshore installations can snf reduce energy costs by 35 per cent, Radia estimates.

It also forecasts that the larger blades would increase the power consistency by up to 20 percent – a key metric for the reliability of wind-farm energy.

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