By Dominic Perry7 May 2020
Offshore helicopter operators will be waiting nervously for the outcome
of investigations into the crash of a military helicopter off the coast of
Greece in which six Canadian personnel were killed.
The Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) Sikorsky CH-148 Cyclone
anti-submarine warfare helicopter came down in good weather in the
Mediterranean Sea on 29 April where it was operating as part of a NATO mission,
killing all six on board.
Source: Canadian
Department of National Defence
Both the cockpit- and flight-data recorders have been recovered, but no
details of the accident have been released. Although the RCAF has “paused”
operations with the type, this is a typical response under the circumstances.
However, commercial operators will be watching the situation with
trepidation as the CH-148 is a military derivative of Sikorsky’s S-92 – a
mainstay of the offshore transportation segment.
While there is no suggestion at this stage of a safety issue with the
Cyclone, if the accident is traced back to a mechanical failure which requires
the S-92 to be grounded for any length of time there are precious few
alternatives for long-range crew-change missions.
If that were to persist, then offshore operators would be left
scrabbling for capacity, believes Steve Robertson, director of boutique
research firm Air & Sea Analytics.
“Is there a like-for-like alternative? No there’s not,” he says. “The
industry would have to find a way of coping somehow, but it would be pretty
difficult in places like Norway and the UK which are reliant on this aircraft.”
According to Air & Sea’s analysis, there were 164 S-92s working in
the oil and gas sector at the turn of the year, with over 70 present in the
North Sea region alone.
Although super-medium-class types such as the Airbus Helicopters H175
and Leonardo Helicopters AW189 – both are 16-passenger aircraft – have a
growing presence in the oil and gas sector, building on the existing fleet of
AW139s, there are unlikely to be sufficient aircraft to backfill for an absent
S-92, says Robertson.
“There is not enough spare capacity sitting around to take up that
slack,” he says. “Each company will have their own contingency plans, but there
is no ‘business as usual’ scenario.”
And while offshore activity may have dipped on the back of lower oil
prices, coronavirus social-distancing rules mean that fewer passengers can be
carried on each helicopter, creating a broadly unchanged short-term flight
requirement in the North Sea.
But globally, activity levels are down by over 25% year on year,
according to Air & Sea data.
Sara Dhariwal, valuations analyst at consultancy Ascend by Cirium, says
that the global fleet of offshore-roled helicopters totals around 1,820
aircraft, of which 210 are S-92s. Storage numbers are “climbing on a daily
basis” on the back of the oil price crash.
While some of these rotorcraft could be pressed back into service if
required, “it would be a challenge to replace the capacity of a fleet of close
to 250 heavy helicopters,” she says.
Oil and gas helicopter operators have been solely reliant on the S-92
for long-range or 19-passenger missions since the effective retirement of the
rival H225 from the majority of offshore missions after a gearbox-related
safety nightmare (ironically beginning on 29 April 2016).
There have been recent scares with the heavy-twin, including a tail
rotor issue in late 2016, but no serious safety failings since a fatal crash in
2009 off Newfoundland.
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