Volga-Dnepr Airlines’ first-ever season of
cargo flights to Antarctica transported over 190 tonnes of cargo
to support the new DROMLAN international Antarctic project
supported by nations including Belgium, Germany, Finland, India,
Japan, the Netherlands, Norway, Russia, South Africa, Sweden and
the United Kingdom.
On behalf of the project, run by the
Antarctic Logistics Centre International (ALCI), Volga-Dnepr
completed 12 return flights using its IL-76TD-90VD freighter. The
flights commenced on 4 November last year and connected Cape Town
with the Novolazarevskaya Antarctic Research Station, a distance
of some 4,200 kilometres.
Volga-Dnepr delivered 125 tonnes
of general cargo to the Antarctic airfield and carried a further
64 tonnes from the ice continent. The shipments were for the
implementation of research and logistics programmes in Antarctica
and included an inland delivery of 34 tonnes from Novolazarevskaya
Station to the central regions of the continent.
DROMLAN
was created to reduce the expenditures of the project’s
participants in the Antarctic region. ALCI arranges
intercontinental flights from Cape Town to the ice airfields of
Queen Maud Land and inland flights using aircraft with
ski-and-wheel systems. It also provides radio communications and
weather monitoring for flight operations as well as food and
accommodation for expedition participants. The Russian Antarctic
expedition helped to launch the DROMLAN project and every year it
prepares and maintains the runway near Novolazarevskaya Station,
also providing the delivery of aviation fuel to the airfield.
“We have successfully completed our first series of
IL-76TD-90VD flights to Antarctica,” said Georgy Sokolov, Sales
Director of Volga-Dnepr UK. “The next series of flights will start
in November because of the polar night environment and difficult
weather conditions. We did a great deal of work before we could
commence commercial deliveries, including pre-flight tests in
Ulyanovsk, a series of ‘ice runs’ in Antarctica to check the
performance and thrust reverser application procedures, and to
obtain an addendum to the IL-76TD-90VD airplane flight manual to
enable it to operate to ice airfields and transport up to 90
people onboard. We thank our partners and customers for their
excellent collaboration with us and we look forward to our next
series of flights to Antarctica!”
The ice run flights
onboard the IL-76TD-90VD aircraft were performed by a joint crew
comprising of test pilots from Russia’s State Research Institute
of Civil Aviation (GosNII GA), Ilyushin Design Bureau, and
technical personnel from Volga-Dnepr Airlines.
The
modernised IL-76TD-90VD aircraft provides a series of advantages
in terms of its flying distance capability, payload weight capacity, hermetical cargo hold, and its fuel efficient and
environment-friendly engines. This enables Volga-Dnepr to
successfully complete cargo missions in any remote regions with
difficult weather conditions. Volga-Dnepr obtained special
approval from Ilyushin Design Bureau to be able to provide a
service to Antarctica for passengers who accompany cargo by
fitting removable seats into the cargo hold as required.
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