Times Colonist

Viking boosts production of Twin Otter aircraft

- CARLA WILSON

Viking Air employees are on the job again after a three-month layoff that saw the company sell several new Twin Otters and move forward on future deals.

“There are a number of deals that are coming through that gave us enough confidence to restart the production line, so it’s fantastic,” Viking president Dave Curtis said from Ottawa where he was attending the Canadian Aerospace Summit.

Viking is also diversifyi­ng by lining up 11 orders to convert CL-215 water bombers into a configurat­ion similar to a newer version of the firefighti­ng plane called the CL-415, or SuperScoop­er.

It is about six months away from a decision on whether to start building new CL-415 aircraft, Curtis said. The plane was built by Bombardier until 2015 and 170 are still in service today.

Orders for more than 20 such aircraft are necessary to start production, Curtis said. He noted that French President Emanuel Macron has expressed interest in the CL-415 and talked about the need for 20 of them in the European Union.

In Europe, the CL-415 is recognized as the primary firefighti­ng airplane, Curtis said.

Different types of aircraft have their own roles to play in fighting fires, Curtis said. Planes are typically used to dump retardant on the edges of fires.

If Viking brings the CL-415 back into production, work would be divided in a similar fashion to what is happening with Twin Otters, he said.

Large components would be manufactur­ed at its North Saanich headquarte­rs on Victoria Internatio­nal Airport lands.

Final assembly would be in the Calgary plant, and planes would likely return to Victoria for finishing and delivery, Curtis said.

A total of 900 jobs would be created if the CL-415 goes into production, Curtis said.

Interest in water bombers comes as climate change sweeps the planet. Severe wildfires broke out this past summer in B.C., with 54 per cent attributed to people, and the rest to lightning, according to the B.C. Wildfire Service.

Viking has been building the updated Twin Otter for a decade. So far, it has sold 130 of the planes around the globe. Each has a base price of about $7 million.

During the 90-day pause in production, which resumed Nov. 1, the company sold eight planes. Recent purchases sent planes to Fiji, Alaska and the Middle East, said Curtis.

 ?? ADRIAN LAM, TIMES COLONIST ?? Keith Cooper works on the belly of a new Twin Otter in the production area of Viking Air, where workers are back on the job after a three-month layoff.
ADRIAN LAM, TIMES COLONIST Keith Cooper works on the belly of a new Twin Otter in the production area of Viking Air, where workers are back on the job after a three-month layoff.

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