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Helicopters Magazine Careers in Aviation
Ken Pole Pole: Ottawa Perspective-Jan/Feb 06

Gen. Rick Hillier echoed the need for speed

Written by Ken Pole   
Confirmation that the Department of National Defence is finally going to order new tactical airlift platforms was one of the last items of business for Defence Minister Bill Graham before the latest federal election campaign left the ramp. The proposed acquisition of at least 16 aircraft, with first delivery in the spring of 2010, and including an initial 20-year service support contract, is expected to cost close to $5 billion.

Flanked at a Parliament Hill news conference by the Chief of the Defence Staff, Gen Rick Hillier, and Public Works & Government Services Minister Scott Brison, Graham said a replacement for the Canadian Forces’ fleet of Lockheed Martin CC-130 Hercules is critical.

The current fleet of 32, comprising 19 Emodels dating from 1964 to 1968 and 13 Hmodels dating from 1973 to 1992, is the primary CF platform for tactical airlift, tactical air-to-air refuelling, and search and rescue. Canada’s fleet has logged more flying hours than any other country’s military Hercules fleet. One E model was taken out of active service only recently after topping 50,000 hours, which works out to more than five and a half years of continuous flight! All the other Es have more than 40,000 hours on them, the equivalent of four and a half years, and their average maintenance costs are rising inexorably, which has implications for other military programs.

“We intend to buy military equipment faster and more efficiently than in the past by basing the competition on performance requirements such as range, speed and the ability to operate in remote and hostile environments,” Graham said.

Asked why the government hadn’t relied on performance-based procurement in the past (the most awkward example being the politicallytortured process which eventually yielded the Cormorant SAR helicopters), Graham suggested that while it was overdue, it was simply evolutionary. “Everyone has been coming to new ways of doing this,” he replied, explaining that he had had discussions with his American, British, Dutch and other counterparts. “The attraction of the performance-based is we get out of the business ... of putting out 17,000 pages of specifications and we put out a document on one page that says here is what the troops need.” He insisted that it “allows industry much more flexibility in coming forward with imaginative proposals.”

Hillier echoed the need for speed. “Without the investments in our tactical airlift fleet, we cannot continue to conduct operations either around the world or on behalf of Canadians back home,” he said with characteristic bluntness, adding that the current fleet “is rapidly going downhill” to the point where it will be “almost completely inoperational” early in 2009. Without new aircraft, “we will have to stop supporting operations or not be able to start them.” Tactical airlift was “a commitment that we cannot ask any other country to meet for the men and women that we put on the ground in high-risk situations.”

Like Hillier’s candour, another sign of the new times in Ottawa was Brison’s announcement that the government would appoint an independent ‘fairness monitor,’ somebody with demonstrated expertise in military procurement, to ensure that bidding is open and competitive. This apparently is in response to criticism that the performance specifications for the new aircraft are tailored to Lockheed Martin’s J-model Hercules, effectively closing the hangar door on Boeing’s C-17 Globemaster III or Airbus Industries’ A400M.

The ministers’ insistence clearly didn’t forestall questions about how the larger C-17 or the A400M, which won’t undergo its first flight until at least 2008, would be rendered noncompetitive. “Performance requirements are laid down not with a view of excluding anybody or directing it anywhere else,” Graham replied. “They are performance requirements that are dictated by our needs, not by what the market supplies.”

As for a requirement that up-front certification is a must, Graham insisted that this isn’t unusual. “In another situation, where one had more leisure and more time, one might well take a different approach, but ... 36 months from when we sign the contract is stretching it and we are going to work trying to get an aircraft earlier.”

When and how all this unfolds remains to be seen. The perception that the project is tailored to Lockheed-Martin is a persistent bone of contention, and possibly the focus of legal action by other manufacturers. There have been indications that aircraft delivery would not begin, at a rate of four a year, until May 2010. That would be well after Hillier’s “inoperational” threshhold and would not see final delivery until late 2013. Airbus evidently has told Ottawa that two A400Ms can be in Canadian hands by 2010 and the balance by 2014 and that it is prepared to provide refurbished Hercs as a stopgap.

During the news conference, Brison said that his department, as the federal government’s procurement arm, would post a “solicitation of interests and qualifications” in “probably another ten days or so.” The latest word was that it was in “translation,” after which it would be posted for at least 30 days to give prospective bidders a chance to understand the operational requirement.” Industry Canada, he added, would “help ensure ... significant regional and industrial benefits” which Graham said would “equal 100% of the contract purchase.”

The J-model Hercules is the latest evolution of a production run of more than 2,200 aircraft. The Herc is flown by more than 60 countries in no fewer than 70 variations. The J is 21% faster at 360 knots than the E, cruising altitude is 40% higher at 28,000 feet and non-stop range with a payload is 40% longer at 2,100 nautical miles. All this and 15% better fuel efficiency from its four Rolls- Royce AE2100D3 turboprops which generate 29% more thrust.

The A400M is still a “paper airplane” in that the first full testbench run of its Europrop TP400-D6 with propellor is not scheduled to take place at Ludwigsfelde, Germany, until sometime early in 2006. Sized between the C-17 and the C- 130J, the A400M is designed to cruise at 0.68 Mach with a 37,000 feet ceiling and carry 37 tonnes 3,000 nautical miles. Designed like the C-17 for a flight crew of two and a single loadmaster, it would cost an estimated US$4 billion for a fleet of 50 and Airbus says the 30-year life-cycle cost would be US$10 billion.

Could Airbus Industries’ decision to give the A400M contract to Europrop two years ago be a factor in the competition? Pratt & Whitney Canada lost a bid to provide the engines even though its price was 20% lower than the European consortium’s. European governments and industry eventually forced Europrop to match P&WC’s price. Airbus, backed by the French, German and Spanish governments, is expected to protest that the tactical airlift race is stacked against the A400M but their complaint probably will fall on deaf ears.

The Globemaster, built at Boeing’s plant in Long Beach, California, has an enviable track record. A high-wing four-engine jet, it costs US$178 million each under the current contract with the US Air Force, which expects its fleet to reach the million-hour mark in the next few months. While costs vary according to how aircraft are equipped and how many are purchased, it’s generally held that although the C-17 is twice as expensive as a C-130J, it can carry more than triple the load, 77.5 tonnes compared with 19.9 tonnes. Its four Pratt & Whitney PW2040 turbofans give it 450 knots at 28,000 feet.

But the bare numbers don’t count with Hillier, who suggested that if Canada bought the C-17, it could afford only half the number of aircraft. “Quantity has a quality all of its own,” he replied when the issue was broached. “We have a direction in the defence policy statement to run two major missions abroad plus many ... smaller ones. We have to be prepared to respond to at least one national disaster or tragedy ... Let’s say one mission in Africa, one mission in the Far East or the Asian perimeter such as East Timor and a mission here in Canada, plus normal training and bringing forth the air crews and the airplanes, you have got to have a number that allow you to do that business and that number of course is what leads us to go about 16 aircraft.”

An enhanced tactical airlift capability is only one item in DND’s aviation shopping cart. It also needs new medium-toheavy- lift helicopters and new fixed-wing SAR assets. Asked why his department had not gone after the two other programs at the same time, which clearly is Hillier’s preference as he pushes to re-equip his commands, Graham disagreed that it had to do with the timing of the election. He did allow that he would have been “much happier bringing forward the whole package” but suggested that the Hercules issue was more politically saleable. “It was felt that on the eve of an election, given the complexity and size of that package, we would be wiser to wait until after the election,” he said. “I think that it was the right decision.”