Cobham has secured an Australian Maritime Safety
Authority (AMSA) contract to provide airborne search and rescue
capability in Australia for 12 years from 2016, with aircraft
modification and mobilisation activity to commence later this
year.
AMSA utilises aircraft based in strategic locations across
Australia to perform search and rescue tasks such as searching for
missing people, locating activated distress beacons, providing
communications support at an incident and dropping survival
equipment to people in distress.
The contract, secured through open industry
competition, has a value including estimated flying charges of A$640 million over 12 years. If three additional optional years are
exercised by AMSA, the full value would exceed A$700 million.
Cobham will acquire, modify, commission and then operate and
maintain four Bombardier Challenger CL-604 special mission jet aircraft to provide a search and rescue capability over land and
at sea.
These aircraft will be specially modified to
Australian requirements and fitted with new generation sensors,
high-vision windows and air operable doors for aerial delivery of
life saving equipment. Much of the modification work will be
undertaken at Cobham’s facilities in Adelaide, South Australia.
The aircraft will be based in Cairns, Melbourne and Perth.
Peter Nottage, Sector President of Cobham Aviation Services,
said, “In a situation where time can be the difference between
life and death, Cobham will provide world-leading safety and
rescue capability to AMSA and Australia. Building on Cobham’s 30
years of experience in special mission operations around the
world, including in Australia, the turnkey solution we will
provide to AMSA represents an evolutionary improvement in range
capability and speed to incident sites with longer loiter and
search time over the search zone ... In addition, the Mission
Management and Communications System offers technological
advantages, including latest generation electronic sensor
technology and broadband satellite communications with real time
sharing of streamed video, audio and imagery between the aircraft
and AMSA’s Rescue Coordination Centre, based in Canberra,
Australia.”
Cobham will employ five-member air crews,
including a Captain, First Officer, Visual Search Officer,
Electronic Search Observer and Aircraft Mission Coordinator who
will be on permanent standby to enable search and rescue tasking
at any time of day or night.
Cobham,
Australia,
Cairns,
Melbourne,
Perth
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