
The upstart company that wants to build the world's largest aircraft
The WindRunner is already being called the largest aircraft in the world, before it has even been built. But this leviathan is not being made by Airbus, Boeing or Lockheed. It is being made by a company that has never built an aircraft before.
Serial entrepreneur and aerospace engineer Mark Lundstrom founded Radia in 2016 to massively expand the size of the onshore wind power industry after he had a "eureka moment". Wind turbine blades installed offshore can reach 100m (345ft) in length – or more – much larger than those on land which tend to be only around 70m (230ft). This is due the difficulty of transporting something so large from the factory to a remote site on a plain or plateau. This in turn limits the economic viability of onshore wind power.
If this problem could be solved, Lundstrom thought, then the longer blades would help onshore wind farms to produce more energy at a lower cost. "They can double or triple the economically viable land in the US for wind farms," says Lundstrom, and could enable the building of over one million of these "super" turbines by 2050, globally. The entrepreneur calls his vision "GigaWind".
Now the company based in Boulder, Colorado has raised more than $150m (£110m) and attracted high-profile advisers to launch a possible solution: the WindRunner. The largest heavier-than-air machine in history is designed to make the transport of huge wind turbine blades a great deal easier and, Radia claims, trigger a revolution in onshore wind power.
"We are building the world's largest aircraft and we're doing that because there's a gigantic gap in the capability of heavy-lift aircraft," says Lundstrom, the company's CEO and founder. "It amazes me that there is no large cargo aircraft in production or planned to meet this need, except for the Radia WindRunner.
"It's the inability to move big things that is basically the barrier that prevents us from super-sizing onshore wind turbines," he says.
There is one additional challenge. This huge machine must be able to navigate the runways and taxiways of existing airports as well as operate on the types of relatively short, semi-prepared airstrips that can easily be built next to wind farms.
Such outsized giants have a precedent. The huge six-engine Antonov An-225 Mriya ("Dream" in Ukrainian) cargo plane used to be the world's biggest aircraft. Its cargo hold was longer than the Wright Brothers' first flight, from take-off to landing. But it was the only one its kind ever completed. Its destruction during the first stages of the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022 was a symbolic blow to Ukraine, and a literal one to the world's aviation community. Overnight, the ability to transport extremely large and oversized cargo – whether complete railway engines, wind turbine blades or disaster relief – was lost.
What's more, the An-225's one-time rivals in the strategic airlift category, such as the Boeing C-17 Globemaster, the Lockheed C-5 Galaxy and the Antonov An-124 "Ruslan" are all out of production, growing long in the tooth and – particularly in the case of the Antonov – less available owing to the war in Ukraine.
There was only one problem when Radia considered this new project: it had never built an aircraft before. Lundstrom assembled an experienced team to design its specification before it was unveiled at the Farnborough International Airshow in 2024. An airship was one solution the team considered, but they decided on a huge fixed-wing aircraft. "We looked at all the different possible ways to move big components," says Lundstrom, "and decided that the best way to go is to a fixed-wing aircraft, designed around aerospace components most of which are in already in mass production today."
The most distinctive feature of this gargantuan fixed-wing aircraft is its huge straight wing, needed to take off and land on a relatively short semi-prepared runway.
If it is constructed, the massive cargo lifter will measure 108m (356ft) in length with an 80m (261ft) wingspan, dictated by the need to load its cargo at a modern airport, and would have a vast payload bay around six times bigger than that of the Antonov An-225.
It would have the biggest cross-section of all heavy-lift aircraft yet constructed. It would be able to haul three 80m (260ft) wind turbine blades, or two 95m (310ft) ones, or one 105m (345ft) blade, and land on a 1,800m (6,000ft) unpaved runway. But it will only be able to lift 72,500kg (74 tonnes) and fly it 2,000 km (1,200 miles). This means the WindRunner, if it is built, looks likely to be confined to flights within North America, Europe or South America.
"Yes, there's lots of challenges," Lundstrom says. "But the fundamental principles of the WindRunner's development have been: don't do anything new, and develop the minimum viable aircraft that's necessary for the mission."
This means no new regulations, supply chains or hangars around the world. "This sadly rules out airships."
To make this vision a reality, Lundstrom and his team have recruited experienced suppliers , including Italy's Leonardo for the fuselage, Spain's Aernnova for the wing and engine pylons, and the United States's AFuzion to oversee safety features.
However, the lack of a named engine supplier has raised questions about the project's viability. But a Radia spokesperson told the BBC that this should not be an issue for much longer. "We have selected an existing certified engine and have been doing work to define the integration strategy on the airframe. We will be announcing the engine partner in the future.
"We expect the development will be cost-effective thanks to Radia's emphasis on reusing as many existing systems, components and technologies as possible," they added. "The unit cost will be commensurate with the weight and size of the aircraft, and therefore comparable with other wide-body civil aircraft."
The aerospace industry has had visionaries in the past who similarly wanted to build the heaviest plane ever made, or the largest aircraft ever to fly. Like them, they have, at most, only built one or two examples of these outsized machines.
Naturally, some observers are cautious about the prospects of the WindRunner. "I just don't see how it is going to work unless they can get more capital investment," says aviation author and commentator Chris Pocock. "The WindRunner doesn't have transatlantic range and so it is not as attractive from that point of view as an outsized cargo carrier."
Pocock also believes Radia was "too dismissive" of airships as a solution. "The designers of hybrid airships are eyeing the same market," he says. "The two most credible hybrid airship designs are not currently designed to carry cargo this size, but they both could be scaled up."
It may be that politics simply gets in the way. US President Donald Trump has called wind power "garbage" and has issued an executive order against its expansion. But the advantages of onshore wind energy, plus the need for energy security, may help make a business case for it in the US.
In May 2025, the US Department of Defense signed an agreement with Radia to study how the WindRunner could carry military cargo. This appeared to be a pivot away from the wind turbine market. But a Radia spokesperson told the BBC that this is not the case. "Radia's core mission remains serving the onshore wind energy market… but WindRunner's unique capabilities mean there are many additional applications, including defence."
In an email to the BBC, Radia said their last funding round was oversubscribed, and they are now working with governments and investors on the next major and larger infusion of investment.
So far, however, Radia have only tested a very small-sized WindRunner model in a wind tunnel. Like other aviation manufacturers and startups, Radia appears to be keen to speed up, and reduce the cost, of the lengthy expensive process to certify the WindRunner safe to fly. To do this along with the use of certified components, they don't plan on building a traditional prototype. Rather, the use of digital design tools should enable the company's next step to be the building of several full-sized test aircraft, the first flight of which is planned by the end of the decade, and then go straight into production. But certification is a daunting process for any aircraft manufacturer, let alone a new one.
More like this:• Pathfinder 1: The airship that may under in a new era• Can we really fuel planes with fat and sugar?• Balloons built for the edge of space
"I… spent a lot of time working with a startup at a former employer," says aviation analyst and commentator Bill Sweetman. "There was a hard business case, a lower technology risk [than the WindRunner], far smaller in scale and easier to get into production, but it was still hard to certify."
The news that Boeing is in the very early stages of discussing the possibility of restarting production of its rival C-17 only adds to the pressure WindRunner faces, even if, as a Radia spokesperson in an email tells the BBC, there is enough pent up demand for both planes, and the WindRunner should be flying before any new C-17 rolls off the production line.
Is the prize WindRunner hopes to claim moving out of reach before the race starts?
--
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OpenRouter Review : Easily Access Over 450 AI Models
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The Guardian
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Despite Trump, the US economy remains surprisingly resilient. But for how long?
Chaotic and unpredictable, keeping up with Donald Trump's volatile trade war – never mind his presidency – can be tough. Back in April after his 'Liberation Day' tariff announcement, the talk was of the president crashing the global economy. Then, after a Wall Street backlash, the world learned the acronym 'Taco', which stands for 'Trump Always Chickens Out'. Now, things are heating up again. The president's decision to hit US trading partners with new tariffs – including Canada, Brazil, India and Taiwan – after his self-imposed 1 August deadline certainly reignites a threat to the world economy. Dozens of countries have been left reeling, and US consumers are expected to pay a heavy price. However, there is a sense that things could have been worse. Nowhere more clearly is this reflected than on Wall Street: despite the chaos of the president's trade war, the stock market remains close to record levels. 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While inflation has ticked up, from 2.4% in May to 2.7% in June, it is well below the peak which followed the height of the pandemic disruption and Russia's invasion of Ukraine, and is far from hitting the levels feared. Back in April, in a country wrought with division, Democrat voters reckoned inflation was on track to hit 7.9% within a year, while Republicans said it would collapse to 0.9%. Butthere is good reason why the US economy has so far defied the prophecies of Armageddon. For starters, the hot-cold nature of Trump's tariff war means investors still anticipate further deals will be done to avoid the worst threats from ever materialising. The toughest tariffs introduced on Friday are only just arriving, too, meaning any impact has yet to emerge. Most countries have not hit back with retaliatory measures, which would have dramatically worsened things by putting international trade into a deeper tailspin. 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BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
My journey to the heart of the forgotten internet
Slowly but surely, huge swaths of the internet are vanishing. But the artefacts of the early web are still out there, and they have lessons for the future. When my family got our first computer in 2003, I watched in awe as the components were set up the living room. Our wooden desk groaned under the weight of the hefty monitor. The computer tower left dents in the carpet. The future was here. And it was big. But it was more than just a computer. It was a portal to a new world for me – a way to access something called the internet. My parents let me log in for one hour per day. My early excursions in cyberspace left me feeling like a pioneer chopping through bushes in a strange land, browsing esoteric websites with bad graphics, message boards and clunky Flash games. At night, I snuck downstairs to boot the computer back up, looking over my shoulder at every creak of an upstairs floorboard. But these days the internet can seem mundane by comparison. I have 24-hour access, and my go-to sites are dreary and familiar: social media platforms that can feel better suited for doomscrolling than exploration. Algorithms lead the way, like a strict tour guide on sanctioned trails cut through a once enigmatic wilderness. So a few months ago, I went in search of some of the earliest corners of the web to see how much of it still there and find out what it has to teach us. The web you and I know may be ending. Because of AI and some radical changes to Google Search, some worry the tools that used to send us to websites will simply give us the answers we're looking for instead. If fewer people visit websites, it could be harder for sites to make money. Some experts fear we've entered a new era that could derail the economic system that encouraged people to create websites in the first place. It's likely that this chapter of digital history is closing. We've lost alarming amounts of our digital history. Some 38% of webpages that existed in 2013 are no longer accessible, according to the Pew Research Center. Niels Brügger, a professor in media and internet history at Aarhus University in Denmark, began noticing it as early as the 1990s. "The average lifetime of a website, it's around a couple of months," he says. (Read more about why there is so little left of the early internet.) This decay has been happening since the web was created. But the older, simpler, stranger net hasn't vanished yet. Ruins of a bygone internet live on, waiting to be explored. You only need to know where to look. 'Welcome Cybernauts!' There's no better place to start than the world's first website, built by the researchers who invented the World Wide Web. Today, it's dedicated to the history of the web itself. But you can also experience the first website as it existed back in 1992, thanks to a tool that simulates the first readily-accessible web browser, called the Line-Mode Browser. It's text only, and you couldn't even use a mouse in its original iteration. To visit pages about bioscience, for example, you typed the number three. "The web existed in the early '90s, but it really was academic and had a very small user base," says Ian Milligan, associate vice-president of research, oversight and analysis at the University of Waterloo in Canada, and a historian who studies web archives. If you want to see the dawn of the modern web, he says you should start in 1996. "That's when the web really begins to pick up as the central communication medium for Western society and then international society," Milligan says. Today, the website for the Liberal Party of Canada, the country's leading political party, is a slick and modern affair. Look back to an archived copy of the Liberal's very first site, however, and you'll find a different atmosphere. "Welcome Cybernauts!" reads a message posted in October 1996, greeting visitors on behalf of then Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chrétien. "We Liberals are excited about the potential of the World Wide Web... the potential for interactive communication with you!" There's a similar tone on the site for former US Senator Bob Dole's failed 1996 presidential run. "There's a wholesomeness to the early web, an earnestness that's hard to find online these days," Milligan says. "Today we live on the internet. It's where our social lives are, where our commerce is, where we interact with our governments, where we decide what university we're going to. As a result, archived websites are the historical record of the last 25 years. They are the primary sources of today." The chronicles of ancient websites have a deep and important history to unveil – but of course, there's also the pull of nostalgia. Dial-up dreams Growing up, the slowness of the web was incredibly frustrating. All that buffering and loading ate into my one allotted hour of internet time – though it did make webpages somewhat more thrilling when it finally loaded. To my delight, I discovered a website that recreates that experience. recreates the sluggish interfaces of outdated web browsers, from Internet Explorer 6 to prehistoric options such as MacLynx 2 and Navigator 3. If you want to go all out, you can even try "Old Google", which replicates former designs of the search engine dating from between 1998 and 2013. But Old Google can't link you directly to the past; you have to find the old websites yourself. One method is to trawl through your own memories. One day in school, while my teacher's back was turned, I logged on to their desktop computer and loaded up a Buffy the Vampire Slayer-themed chat room I had discovered during one of my illicit night-time excursions online. It was my first experience of instant messaging. My friends and I watched wide-eyed as strangers chimed in from other continents. Sadly, but unsurprisingly, the Buffy site is no more. Enter the Internet Archive, a non-profit organisation dedicated to preserving the web. Perhaps it's no coincidence, as Milligan points out, that the Archive was founded in 1996, just as the internet's popularity exploded. "In many cases, archives of the web, like those available from the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine, offer the only access to those otherwise-lost records," says Mark Graham, director of the Wayback Machine. "News stories, obituaries, poems, fan-fiction, travel reports, family histories and other pages that have special and unique meaning to people all over the world." The Internet Archive has scraped more than 946 billion webpages, sometimes saving different versions of the same page multiple times a day. You can paste URLs in its search engine to find copies of decades-old sites. I looked up "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" and there was the login screen, frozen in time since October 2003. I then tried Bebo, the long-gone social media platform I used in my pre-teens, and found 34,000 captures taken since 2000. My profile may be gone, but countless others have been saved, tiny windows into the lives of anonymous strangers from the past. It reminded me of another site I spent hours bouncing around: eBaum's World, famous for viral videos, games, crude humour and stolen content – a repository for memes before they even had a name. The archived copies of eBaum's World perfectly encapsulate my early 2000s online experiences: a chaotic mish-mish of disparate interests. I found a page I remembered dedicated to celebrity soundboards. You could play audio clips through the phone and trick friends into thinking Jim Carrey was calling. There it was, saved for posterity. Lost and found One of Milligan's favourite research subjects is GeoCities, one of the first platforms that made it easy for anyone to host their own page online. GeoCities shut down in 2009, but much is preserved in the Internet Archive. Browsing its pages is like a trip back in time, a vision of an era when the internet seemed as private as it was public. "People felt that not everything they would say would be tracked back to them," Milligan says. "There's a refreshing candour to it, a sense that people are really engaging without self-censoring themselves." GeoCities is perhaps best known for its graphic design, full of text in written in the font Comic Sans and the generous use of gifs. In fact, there's an entire search engine dedicated to it called GifCities. Type in a word or phrase, and you'll uncover mountains of animated digital folk art on the subject. The Internet Archive isn't the web's only digital repository. In 2005, for example, Brügger helped launch the Danish Web Archive, committed to recording the nation's one million web pages. "It's really important that we preserve this cultural heritage, because it's an important part of our life," Brügger says. Then there are the online artefacts that haven't gone offline. I was four years old in 1996 when a website promoting Space Jam, a live-action movie where Michael Jordan plays basketball with the Looney Tunes, was created. It's still intact in an archived form – a living relic from ancient times. The site is resplendent with an overbearing, repeating background pattern (a staple of early web design) and pages with barely enough information to justify their existence, at least by today's standards. I dug up another old website dedicated to the study of sporks, a perfect example of early internet humour seemingly untouched since – you guessed it – 1996. It felt wonderfully handmade: white and yellow text sitting on a plain black-background, with simple animations decorating the page. It captures a time when nothing was too niche or inane to warrant its own site. An archive can feel more like visiting a museum than actively surfing the net, however, but that experience isn't totally lost either. In the early 2010s, I let strangers send me to unexpected places on the web using StumbleUpon, a site that would take you to random webpages added by other users, full of obscure blogs or quirky homepages. StumbleUpon shut down in 2018, but the concept has been reborn, this time with a nostalgic twist. A new tool called Wiby has a similar randomising button, but its library consists entirely of the handmade, idiosyncratic sites of the early web. You can enter a specific word using the search box to find related pages or click "surprise me" to land on a random ancient site. I encountered a website dedicated to photos of someone's pet fish, a random gnome generator and Starsky and Hutch fan-fiction. The pages are endearingly under-developed, filled with pixelated images, overbearing graphics and dense text in jarring colours. More like this: In a world of polished, algorithmically optimised content, the old internet is a testament to individuality and experimentation. People didn't necessarily care about appealing to big online followings or going viral. They made things for the sake of it. Because they loved whatever it was they were into. Now, as some worry that AI is ushering in an increasingly impersonal online experience, where human output is filtered and regurgitated via chatbots, the early internet reminds us that personality and human creativity was once far more prized. It's hard to argue that today's internet isn't more useful, or at least more functional. But the internet used to feel like wandering through a college dorm, knocking on doors and seeing how each person had decorated their room to their individual tastes. You never knew what to expect, who you'd meet, or where you'd end up. It wasn't necessarily "better", but it was weirder, freer and far more personal. As the web enters its next chapter, perhaps those memories can steer us towards a more human online world. -- For more technology news and insights, sign up to our Tech Decoded newsletter, while The Essential List delivers a handpicked selection of features and insights to your inbox twice a week. For more science, technology, environment and health stories from the BBC, follow us on Facebook and Instagram.