Vancouver Sun

Mostly quiet on the western wildfire front

- BILL GRAVELAND

A family run company providing air-tanker support to control menacing wildfires in B.C., Alberta, Manitoba and Yukon is a little less busy these days, but it has nothing to do with COVID-19.

“It has been really quiet on the fire front in both Alberta and B.C. the past two or three years. You get areas of intense activity and then a lot of tedium waiting for things to happen,” says Paul Lane, vice-president and chief operating officer of Airspray Airtankers, which has a maintenanc­e hangar at the airport in Red Deer.

There have been about 700 wildfires in Alberta this year with 32 square kilometres lost compared with the five-year average of 1,300 fires and 4,100 sq. km burned.

In B.C., there have been about 650 fires with 154 sq. km lost compared with the average of 1,758 blazes and 3,690 sq. km of forest burned.

Airspray has contracts with government­s and is on-call each fire season.

The backbone of its western Canadian fleet is the Lockheed Electra, a four-turboprop-engine plane, about the size of a 737, It's equipped with a 12,000-litre belly tank that drops a mud slurry fire retardant from about 45 metres above the ground.

“It allows the ground crews to go in and work safely in terms of extinguish­ing the fire. It creates essentiall­y a firebreak and we can drop anywhere from a twelfth of a load to a full salvo,” says Lane.

“Typically, these are the first guys out, particular­ly in Western Canada.”

The fleet also includes 10 smaller Bird Dog aircraft, which carry command-and-control air attack officers who oversee how a fire is fought, including management of ground crews and helicopter­s dropping water.

Lane says the business has been in operation for nearly 50 years. It has 54 aircraft with 35 based in Canada. The U.S. operation is in Chico, Calif.

“We are running skimmer aircraft in Washington (state) and Oregon and so those aircraft were quite busy particular­ly toward the end of the season.”

Raging fires in both states, as well as in California, have burned millions of hectares, caused deaths and destroyed hundreds of structures in the U.S. west coast's worst fire season in 70 years.

The winter months involve full maintenanc­e on the air fleet.

Lane says the 60 pilots working for Airspray have at least 8,000 hours' experience before being hired.

They're recalled at the end of February for retraining before the fire season gets underway.

“Many of our pilots have been with us for many years and so they work for us in the summer and many of them did work for the airlines or did other types of flying in the winter.

“What you don't want is any complacenc­y in the cockpit, particular­ly when you're flying that close to the ground.”

Lane believes wildfires have become more dangerous in recent years because people are living closer to where fires start.

“If you look at the canyons in California, they're more and more becoming populated with extremely large houses and infrastruc­ture,” he says.

“Even in Alberta, even in B.C., you'll see much more pipeline infrastruc­ture, much more infrastruc­ture around cellphone towers. ... Those elements give a greater need of defensible infrastruc­ture.”

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Airspray's Paul Lane, says the past few years have been “really quiet” for B.C. wildfires.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Airspray's Paul Lane, says the past few years have been “really quiet” for B.C. wildfires.

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