National Post (National Edition)

COVID-19 delays new aircraft

Airbus-built CC-295s stuck in Spain

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA Air Force is being forced to fly its ancient search-and-rescue planes even longer as COVID-19 further delays the delivery of replacemen­t aircraft.

The Defence Department is playing down any significan­t impact on the military’s search-and-rescue operations from the new delay, which has left the first of 16 new Airbus-built CC-295s stranded in Spain for at least several more months.

Jessica Lamirande, a department spokeswoma­n, said a recent analysis conducted by the Air Force and procuremen­t officials concluded the military has “the necessary flexibilit­y” to keep flying its current search-andrescue planes.

Those planes include six Buffalo aircraft and seven older-model Hercules planes. Their primary role is to find and rescue Canadians stranded or in danger in places or situations where municipal or provincial authoritie­s are unable to respond.

Yet the planes are all around 50 years old and scheduled for retirement as maintenanc­e requiremen­ts have grown and spare parts become harder to find. In 2014, officials had to get parts from a museum in Trenton, Ont., in 2014 to fix a broken Hercules.

Canada’s auditor general also raised concerns about the state of the aircraft in a scathing report in 2013, noting the Buffalo aircraft were unavailabl­e on 119 occasions in 2011.

In five of those cases, no other airplane was available.

Lamirande said the Buffalo and Hercules planes would be able to operate until the CC-295s are in the air, saying: “We have the necessary flexibilit­y to ensure continued and safe SAR coverage utilizing the existing capability.

“Although there are still schedule risks given the uncertaint­y of the pandemic situation, Canadians can rest assured that the Royal Canadian Air Force will continue to provide uninterrup­ted search-and-rescue services until we transition to the new capability.”

The federal government first started looking for new search-and-rescue planes in 2002, but the effort ground to a halt in 2007 after the Air Force was accused of rigging its requiremen­ts to favour an Italian-made plane.

A new competitio­n was eventually launched and saw Airbus selected in 2016 to build 16 new CC-295s for $2.4 billion, with the first plane to be delivered last December and flying rescue missions this year.

Lamirande acknowledg­ed the aircraft will remain in Spain until at least the early fall, saying the COVID-19 pandemic set back production as well as the military’s ability to travel to Spain to review the plane and ensure it meets the Air Force’s requiremen­ts.

“We are and have been working closely with Airbus to develop and implement mitigation strategies that will ensure continued progress notwithsta­nding the situation,” she said.

The government receives about 10,000 distress calls a year. Most are handled by the provinces or territorie­s, with police and volunteers tasked with responding. About 750 of the most highrisk calls are answered by the military.

Military search-and-rescue personnel often use their specialize­d airplanes and helicopter­s to parachute or rappel into remote areas such as mountains, the High Arctic or one of Canada’s three oceans to respond to plane crashes and sinking ships.

The military considers search-and-rescue a “no-fail mission,” meaning it must be ready around the clock and respond when called upon to help because of the potentiall­y deadly consequenc­es.

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