|
|||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||
Aerial Firefighters
Promote Large Air Tanker Modernization Plan By Steve Hall |
||||
February 29, 2012 - The
current 11 Large Air Tankers, operated by two companies,
are former Navy P2V Neptunes averaging 50 years of age.
The aircraft were modified with 2,700 gallon capacity
tanks for dropping fire retardant and have a remaining
life expectancy of roughly 10 years.
"The aerial firefighting industry has long recognized these Air Tankers were getting old and would have to be replaced," said Tom Eversole, Executive Director of the American Helicopter Services and Aerial Firefighting Association (AHSAFA) in Washington, DC.
"Several years ago, in anticipation of a government
strategy for modernizing the airtanker fleet, we, as an
industry took the first steps toward acquiring more
modern aircraft to replace the legacy fleet." |
||||
Eversole reported the US Forest Service has not proposed a specific time table for total phase out of the P2Vs. However, it did finally issue the long awaited Aerial Firefighting Strategy document on February 10, 2012, although the strategy lacked detail as to how the USFS planned to accomplish the modernization of the large airtanker fleet.
The USFS
also issued a Request For Proposal (RFP) for modernizing the
large airtanker fleet to which as many as six companies were
expected to respond by the February 17 deadline. Under the RFP,
the operators would acquire the aircraft and deploy them under
USFS contracts. Actual acquisition costs would be borne by
individual aircraft owners, and would not require special
funding from Congress for acquisition purposes.
The
industry proposal calls for a fleet of 26 modern, turbine
powered tankers that would meet USFS requirements, which
includes the capability to carry 3,000-4,000 gallons of fire
retardant. At this time, potentially two air tanker operators
are proposing a modified BAE 146, and one of those operator
received interim approval to operate a BAE 146 Large Air Tanker
last year in the wildland firefighting environment.
If the
industry plan goes forward, that aircraft, or some other
appropriate type, would phase out the legacy Air Tankers on the
basis of adding five, seven, eight, and six aircraft in years
2012, 2013, 2014 and 2015. Acquisition and tanking costs would run about $6 to $8 million per aircraft, depending upon the model selected. Contract availability costs and flight costs would run about 30 and 35 percent higher, respectively, over the legacy fleet, but that would be offset by lower maintenance expenses, and greater mission capabilities. |