Wildfire Threat Drives European Firebomber
Modernization
Tony Osborne April
30, 2024
The arrival of the DHC-515 in Europe will supplement CL-215T and CL-415
aircraft in service with Europe’s air forces and civil protection agencies such
as France’s Securite Civile.
Credit: Tony Osborne/AW&ST
A wave of
orders from Europe looks set to enable the restart of production for one of
Canada’s most famous aviation exports.
In the
coming months, six European countries with financial support from the European
Commission (EC) are expected to have finalized contracts for 24 De Havilland
Canada DHC-515s—a modernized version of the distinctive Canadair, later
Bombardier CL-215, family of amphibians.
·
12 DHC-515s are being funded by the European
Commission
·
Airframer is waiting for 20 orders to start
production
European air
forces and civil protection organizations operate more than half the global
fleet of CL-215-family aircraft, most of them turboprop-powered CL-215Ts and
CL-415s.
These
heavily utilized machines—usually painted in high-visibility red-and-yellow
schemes and often known as Canadairs, Super Scoopers or Peli-cans—skim rivers,
lakes and seas to snorkel up water and then drop it on forest fires across
Southern Europe.
Now, with
the planned introduction of the DHC-515, the European fleets will be modernized
and strengthened as governments face the increased threat of wildfires driven
by rising summer temperatures and droughts that have lead to the ravagement of
forests, farmland and property. Estimates put the damage from such fires in
Europe at $4.1 billion in 2023.
“Forest
fires are a growing problem for Europe,” an EU official tells Aviation Week.
“The fire season is becoming longer and longer, and it is no longer just a Club
Med issue but spreading south to north.”
Light
firefighting aircraft now have been positioned in Germany and Sweden, officials
say, a requirement that was “unthinkable three or four years ago.”
So far,
Croatia, Greece and Spain have placed orders for the DHC-515 to add to their
existing fleets of CL-215s, CL-215Ts and CL-415s. Croatia has ordered two
DHC-515s, while Greece and Spain have ordered seven each. France, Italy and
Portugal are expected to sign contracts soon for another eight aircraft.
“This
[acquisition] makes us empowered for firefighting activity in Croatia but also
an important regional actor when it is necessary to help other European
countries,” Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic said in announcing his
country’s DHC-515 order on March 22.
Of the 24
aircraft being ordered by the six countries, 12 are being funded by €600
million ($643 million) from the EC's RescEU civil protection initiative, which
previously created a temporary pool of firefighting aircraft from member states
that can be deployed across Europe should civil protection agencies require
additional assistance. Negotiations among the member states, the EC and the
manufacturer have been ongoing for several years.
Now, with
the funding of two DHC-515s for each of the six countries, RescEU will have its
own dedicated fleet of aircraft that can be deployed anywhere in Europe.
“RescEU are
not the first responders,” the EU official notes. “We are the safety net,
supporting the member states once they are overwhelmed.”
The
EU-funded aircraft will be operated and maintained by the individual countries
for national purposes, but the aircraft can be retasked by RescEU if required.
However, EU officials note that any decision to deploy the aircraft is taken in
conjunction with member states, so aircraft will not be mobilized from a
country that needs them at the time. The idea is that the 12-strong fleet can
be deployed to three consecutive requests for assistance.
“The nations
chose the DHC-515 because they are familiar with the aircraft,” the EU official
says. “They have the personnel, maintenance [and] spare parts; it is a
relationship they wanted to continue.”
The DHC-515s
are being ordered through government-to-government agreements with the Canadian
Commercial Corp., a Canadian government contracting agency acting on behalf of
De Havilland Canada.
Development
of the DHC-515 was formally launched in March 2022, following the 2016 purchase
of the Canadair portfolio of CL-215 and CL-415 amphibians by Viking Air, which
was later renamed to De Havilland Canada.
This new
version will feature improved performance and reliability due to a new
turboprop engine and new avionics, but the company so far has been tight-lipped
on details. De Havilland Canada has begun preproduction activities on the
DHC-515, company officials tell Aviation Week. Although orders for 16 of the 24
aircraft are under contract, the OEM is waiting until 20 have been ordered
before it signs purchase orders for components from its supply chain to start
production.
Deliveries
of the new aircraft are expected to commence in late 2027.
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