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Fouga

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Air Corps 'not equipped' to provide rescue services
« on: January 31, 2011, 09:40:38 pm »
http://www.independent.ie/national-news/air-corps-not-equipped-to-provide-rescue-services-2480909.html


Air Corps 'not equipped' to provide rescue services
Sunday Independent
By JOHN DRENNAN and DON LAVERY
Sunday January 02 2011

A national search-and-rescue helicopter service could not be carried out by the Irish Air Corps because it would cost tens of millions of euro for new aircraft, training and bases, a memo to Government has revealed.

There would be no cost savings if the service was carried out by the Air Corps, the memo released under the Freedom of Information (FoI) Act said, pointing out that the Department of Defence withdrew from providing a limited service in 2003.

Last year, Minister for Transport Noel Dempsey signed a controversial 10-year, €500m contract with a civilian operator to provide the service, more then twice the cost of the existing civilianised service.

According to Fine Gael's Fergus O'Dowd, who obtained the information under FoI, the new service will cost €150m more than the old contract over the 10 years.

There was some criticism as to why the Air Corps had not been asked to provide the service, or why its aircrew and aircraft was not used as part of search-and-rescue operations.

But a memo to Mr Dempsey, written by Chris Reynolds, director of the Irish Coast Guard, pointed out:

The Air Corps did not have aircraft able to reach out into the Atlantic from Coast Guard bases in Sligo and Limerick.

For the Air Corps to service the two bases, three to four new medium-load helicopters would be needed, costing up to €60m.

If existing Air Corps AW 139 helicopters were used at the two other bases in Dublin and Waterford, they would need two per base.

At €3,000 per flying hour, the four aircraft would need to be converted for their new role at a total cost of €8m, with six months' downtime for each aircraft.

Basing helicopters at Waterford would cost €500,000 a year.

Converting pilots and crew for maritime search and rescue would cost up to €380,000 per pilot for converting to aircraft type and role, and €56,000 for a crewman.

The memo also warned that crews that were trained could be lost to industry, with all the training and experience costs having been borne by the State.

It said that pilots and air crew in the military change roles and aircraft types many times in a career, needing a greater level of manpower and refresher training.

Civilian crews had one role with no changes. The net effect was that the Air Corps cost for additional crew, additional headquarters administration costs, allowances and other current cost increases would not result in savings.

The memo also pointed out that the new AW 139 helicopters used by the Air Corps were also being used by the UK coast guard for search-and-rescue work off the south coast of Britain and had "not earned a good reputation".

"They can only rescue a very small number of people and are poorly adapted for the work.

"The UK has decided [that it] will remove the AW 139s from its fleet in the next contract and go for a full-sized helicopter fleet, all of the same make.

"A point on the small size of the AW 139 is that it will be a very poor rescue craft in a mass-rescue situation off Dublin, Cork or Rosslare," the memo read.

It also said that the State would have to hold the risk of an accident or total write-off of a helicopter and would have to replace it rapidly to ensure continuity.

The memo pointed out that maritime search and rescue was dangerous work -- with the Air Corps suffering a tragic loss of a helicopter and crew in Waterford, the US coast guard suffered a similar loss in 2009, and the Irish Coast Guard had on occasion suffered serious damage to its machines.

The memo conceded that it was difficult to assess what the cost of the new contract would be, but that it was likely to be 40 per cent greater then current expenditure.

- JOHN DRENNAN and DON LAVERY

Sunday Independent

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Re: Air Corps 'not equipped' to provide rescue services
« Reply #1 on: February 01, 2011, 05:00:19 pm »
I posted the above story in 'Air Corps News' on 3 Jan 2011.

Fouga

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Re: Air Corps 'not equipped' to provide rescue services
« Reply #2 on: February 02, 2011, 12:16:43 am »
I posted the above story in 'Air Corps News' on 3 Jan 2011.

No problem I had not seen it.

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Re: Air Corps 'not equipped' to provide rescue services
« Reply #3 on: February 13, 2011, 03:51:36 pm »
From todays Sunday Independent....

Value of €500m rescue services deal questioned
Helicopter firm embroiled in UK bidding row
 

By DON LAVERY Exclusive

Sunday February 13 2011

A controversial €500m contract for search-and-rescue services signed by former Transport Minister Noel Dempsey should be investigated by the incoming government, a Fine Gael TD urged yesterday.

Education spokesman Fergus O'Dowd said the new contract for the Irish Coast Guard would cost €150m more than the existing contract over 10 years.

"I will insist that this matter be fully and thoroughly investigated," Mr O'Dowd said yesterday.

He said the contract should be at the top of any new government's agenda to see whether it represents value for money over 10 years and to investigate whether the service could be provided more cheaply.

Last July, Mr Dempsey signed the contract with CHC Ireland (CHCI), which is due to start in July next year and run for 10 years, with an option to extend for a further three years on a year-by-year basis.

The service will see a new generation helicopter, the Sikorsky S-92, used to replace the existing fleet of Sikorsky S-61s, some of which are 40 years old.

CHCI is to provide four helicopters at Waterford, Shannon, Sligo and Dublin in the lease contract up to 2022, with a back-up helicopter.

It is believed the fleet will involve one new S-92 and four second-hand machines used in Britain.

Mr O'Dowd got documents under the Freedom of Information Act, which revealed that the head of the Irish Coast Guard claimed there would be no cost savings if the service was carried out by the Irish Air Corps and they were not equipped for the role.

However, this has been disputed by Agusta Westland, which manufactures the main helicopter used by the Air Corps, the AW139, and by former Air Corps personnel who said the Defence Forces should have been given an opportunity to tender.

The Air Corps withdrew from limited search-and-rescue duties in 2004.

Meanwhile, the Canadian company CHC has been part of a consortium offering search-and-rescue services in Britain in a £6bn (€7bn) contract that has run into trouble.

The UK has abandoned the procurement process as military police investigate how information relating to the bid process fell into the hands of the preferred bidder, a consortium called Soteria, which includes CHC, Sikorsky and French defence group Thales.

Philip Hammond, Britain's secretary of state for transport, said in a statement that Soteria had informed the government in December of irregularities concerning the conduct of their bid team.

Irregularities included access by CHC Helicopter to commercially sensitive information regarding official evaluations of bids, he said, and evidence that a former member of the government's project team had assisted the consortium in preparing its bid.

CHC said: "In November of last year, CHC became aware that a small number of its employees acting without its knowledge or authorisation of the company's senior management may have violated the company's high standard of ethics during its participation in the competitive bid process.

"As soon as CHC became aware of the perceived irregularities it upheld those standards by immediately informing the British government, and co-operating fully with the government," it added.

The consortium had been due to take over search-and-rescue for 25 years from 2012 in the UK.

However the Department of Transport here said the €500m Irish contract with CHC would not be affected by the British move.

The department said the contract with CHC had been concluded and signed, and the first installment had been paid "as per its terms".

This is understood to involve a payment of around €19m to CHC.

- DON LAVERY Exclusive

Sunday Independent