Tag Archives: Rise Air

Where Aviation Is a Lifeline: Connecting Northern Canada with Rise Air

From ATR:

Somewhere in Northern Saskatchewan, a mother is waiting.

She needs to get to a medical appointment in the city, one she canโ€™t miss. Thereโ€™s no highway that will take her there. No train. No bus. Just a small airstrip, a turboprop engine humming to life in -40ยฐC air, and a flight attendant who knows her name.

This is what Rise Air does every single day.

Rise-Air-ATR-72-600

More Than an Airline: A mission beyond transportation

Rise Air connects dozens of remote communities across Northern Saskatchewan. But to call it simply an airline would be to miss the point entirely.

For the people it serves, each flight carries something that canโ€™t be measured in cargo weight or seat capacity. It carries a child getting home after surgery. A family reunited after months apart. Fresh food reaching a community that hasnโ€™t seen a delivery in weeks. A worker heading out, knowing their family back home is taken care of.

As a 100% Indigenous-owned airline, Rise Air was built for the communities it serves. Thatโ€™s not a marketing line, this is what shapes every decision, every route, every flight.

โ€œFor the communities we serve, air travel isnโ€™t about convenience, itโ€™s about access. Whether itโ€™s getting to a medical appointment, receiving essential goods, providing access to employment, or staying connected with loved ones, every flight plays a critical role. Our partnership with ATR allows us to continue delivering that service reliably, even in the most challenging conditions.โ€ Derek Nice, President and CEO โ€“ Rise Air

Flying where few can operate

Operating anywhere in Northern Canada means facing some of the most demanding conditions in commercial aviation.

Extreme winter temperatures can drop to -40ยฐC and below. Many airstrips are short, remote, or unpaved. Scheduled routes supporting community members are often low-density but critically important.

These realities require aircraft that are not only efficient, but highly adaptable and reliable.

Why ATR: built for the realities of the North

To support its mission, Rise Air has introduced the latest generation of turboprop aircraft with the ATR 72-600, marking the entry of the ATR -600 series into the Canadian market.

Designed specifically for regional aviation, the ATR 72-600 combines performance and versatility:

  • Ability to operate on short and challenging runways
  • Proven reliability in extreme weather conditions
  • Optimized efficiency for low-density routes

For operators like Rise Air, these capabilities are not advantages; they are necessities.

A Smaller Footprint, a Bigger Commitment

Modernising the fleet also means taking responsibility for the future.

For communities where aviation is the only realistic option, where there is no responsible alternative, flying more efficiently is the most meaningful environmental step an airline can take.

โ€œAs we look to the future, itโ€™s essential that we continue improving how we serve our communities, both operationally and environmentally. The ATR 72-600 supports that ambition by burning 45% less fuel and produces 45% fewer emissions than regional jets of comparable size.โ€ Dan Gold, Director, Marketing and Stakeholder Relations โ€“ Rise Air

What a Flight Actually Means

Behind every flight is a tangible impact on the ground. Think about what it means to live somewhere with no roads out. Every doctorโ€™s visit is a flight. Every delivery of fresh produce is a flight. Every time a young person leaves for college, or comes home for the holidays, thatโ€™s a flight too. Aviation isnโ€™t infrastructure here. Itโ€™s the thread that supports community life.

Rise Air holds that thread carefully.

Rise Air takes delivery of its first ATR 72-600

Rise Air has just welcomed the first ATR 72-600 in Canada, marking a bold step toward modern, reliable air travel for Saskatchewanโ€™s communities and the workforce that powers its economy.


Rise Air employs over 280 personnel in locations ranging from Saskatoon to Fond-du-Lac, serving the north and working and living alongside our valued customers and community partners. With a varied and ever-expanding fleet of fixed-wing aircraft, including wheels, floats, and skis, Rise Air is the only air operator in Saskatchewan with the capability of moving people and goods to and from virtually any location in the province and beyond. By taking advantage of the efficiencies unique to our broad spectrum of expertise and experience, Rise Air continues to offer high-quality tailored aviation solutions, which serve, support, and promote the growth and success of Saskatchewan.

Scheduled commercial flights, with larger aircraft equipped with washrooms and flight attendants, serve the communities of Saskatoon, Prince Albert, La Ronge, Stony Rapids, Fond-du-Lac, Uranium City and Wollaston Lake. Rise Air also has decades of experience providing contract charter flights, including mine personnel shift changes and provincial court party transportation. Numerous accredited maintenance bases across the province means that MEDEVAC transportation, corporate and charter travel, and freight hauling are just a few of the many services Rise Air can provide safely, efficiently, and reliably, 365 days a year.

Rise Air is a 100 per cent Indigenous-owned company. We work hard to deliver long-term value to our shareholders โ€” the First Nation communities who share ownership of Rise Air through Athabasca Basin Development (ABD) and Prince Albert Development Corporation (PADC). Shareholder Benefits Our profits are re-invested into the communities we serve through payments made to ABD and PADC.

Route Map:

The ATR 72-600 will join a diverse fleet including ATR 42s.