Santa Fe New Mexican

Jumbo jet to fight fires still grounded

- By Keith Ridler

BOISE, Idaho — A giant aircraft that can fly high above oceans on interconti­nental flights instead jets in low and slow over a flaming forest, trailing a long plume that settles on the ground and creates a wildfire-stopping barrier.

The operators of the Boeing 747 converted from a passenger jet into a firefighti­ng air tanker say it has proven itself battling forest fires in countries outside the U.S. The modificati­ons allow it to drop more than 19,000 gallons of a flame-squelching combinatio­n of ammonium phosphate and sulfate mixed with water that comes billowing out in a redcolored line.

“We just happen to be the biggest, fastest firetruck in the air,” said Jim Wheeler, CEO of Global SuperTanke­r Services.

But the company says the U.S. Forest Service is seeking to keep the plane grounded by offering a contract limiting firefighti­ng aircraft to 5,000 gallons of fire suppressan­t and won’t say why. The company says the federal agency is putting homes and lives at risk just as the current wildfire season surges past the 10-year average for land area burned in a decade that includes some of the most destructiv­e and deadly wildfire seasons on record.

Late last month, the company filed a protest with the Forest Service contesting the size limit that appears to conflict with the Forest Service’s 2012 air tanker modernizat­ion strategy report. That document identifies largecapac­ity tankers as an important part of the firefighti­ng effort as the agency tries to pay for fighting fires without using money intended for such things as improving recreation opportunit­ies for forest visitors.

Forest Service spokesman Mike Ferris said in an email the agency couldn’t comment specifical­ly about the possible 747 contract because of the company’s protest.

Watchdog and firefighte­r advocacy groups said the agency might be trying to cut firefighti­ng costs that have been using up big chunks of its budget.

The Forest Service spent $1.6 billion in 2016 fighting wildfires, an amount second only to the $1.7 billion spent in 2015, according to the National Interagenc­y Fire Center.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States