This Article is From Dec 08, 2016

Canada Buys New Airbus Search And Rescue Planes For Canadian $2.4 Billion

Canada Buys New Airbus Search And Rescue Planes For Canadian $2.4 Billion

The contract will also include servicing the planes, through a joint venture.

Ottawa, Canada: Canada's air force will buy 16 Airbus C295W aircraft modified for search and rescue to replace its aging fleet, at a cost of Canadian $2.4 billion (USD$1.8 billion), the government announced on Thursday.

The contract will also include servicing the planes, through a joint venture between Airbus Defence and Space and Canada's PAL Aerospace, the government said.

Airbus's bid to replace 19 de Havilland Buffalo and Lockheed Hercules, which have been in use for five decades, beat out Italian and Brazilian competitors.

"We are acutely conscious of the importance of search and rescue in Canada's vast and challenging territory and we are honored to have been selected to provide the aircraft and service to ensure that the role is carried out effectively," Simon Jacques, the head of Airbus Defence and Space said.

This contract brings to 185 the number of C295s sold by Airbus around the world since 1997.

Canada's C295Ws will join other Airbus aircraft used by the Canadian military for air-to-air refueling, transport and VIP travel.

The first search and rescue planes will be delivered to Canada in three years.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
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