Norway awards contract for Bell 412 helicopter modification
Details
More Products & Services
Products & Services
Defence Insight
Shephard Media
Some of the things people like you use Defence Insight for:
- Total addressable market sizing ($)
- Competitor analysis
- Cost analysis
- Market forecasting
- Growth identification
- Increasing closing ratio
- Increasing closing order value
- Estimating product potential
- Calculating sales forecasting
- Supply and demand analysis
Military Unmanned Systems Handbook
Shephard Media
The Military Unmanned Systems Handbook (Digital Download) is an international guide to the military UV industry and provides detailed information on air, ground and sea (surface & sub-sea) vehicles as well as subsystems. What's included: Unencrypted 390+ page PDF of equipment and supplier information Market summary
Description
The Norwegian Armed Forces has signed a contract to upgrade its fleet of Bell 412 helicopters with modifications, rather than rebuilds or replacement technology.
The contract was signed between the Norwegian Defence Material Agency (NMDA) and supplierKongsberg Aviation Maintenance Services(KAMS)who willprovide the modification design via Patriafor the fleet of Bell 412 helicopters which has served the nation for 35 years.
The move to modify at least half of the 18-strong helicopter fleet has been in the pipeline since at least 2023. Itwill beexpected to keep the Bell 412 helicopters flying for at least another 15 years beyond 2025 when the remodelling will beexpected to be complete.
Related Articles
LifePort's BPS approved for Bell 412EP
Somalia receives Bell 412 helicopters of unknown origin
That additional lifespan will take the helicopters beyond their initial expected operational lifespan of 50 years.
The decision went against the advice of General Erik Kristoffersen, chief of the Norwegian Armed Forces, who believed the helicopters should be phased out at the end of their expected operational life cycle.
The new modifications will be aimed at keeping the Norwegian Armed Forces' helicopter fleet going until modern replacement aircraft can be procured. It is not yet clear when the Norwegian Armed Forces expects that procurement to come, but the aim of extending the fleet's life by 15 years indicates potential timelines for that replacement programme.
Defence contractor Patria was selectedto provide the modification design, a Supplemental Type Certificate (STC), working as a subcontractor for KAMS.
The modifications will take place in two phases. The first phase, which has now been agreed upon, will upgrade and update the helicopters' civil communications and navigation systems.
Norway's minister of defence Bjørn Arild Gram said the modifications were a way of ensuring Norway retained its helicopter coverage until more modern replacement aircraft become available and cost-effective.
“The Norwegian government has arranged for an increase in helicopter capacity in the long-term plan,” commentedGram.“By upgrading the Bell 412, we now ensure helicopter readiness until the new helicopters are in place, so that the Armed Forces will have better operational capacity during the transition period.”
Related Programmes in Defence Insight
Bell 412 Replacement Forecast (18)
The contract was signed between the Norwegian Defence Material Agency (NMDA) and supplierKongsberg Aviation Maintenance Services(KAMS)who willprovide the modification design via Patriafor the fleet of Bell 412 helicopters which has served the nation for 35 years.
The move to modify at least half of the 18-strong helicopter fleet has been in the pipeline since at least 2023. Itwill beexpected to keep the Bell 412 helicopters flying for at least another 15 years beyond 2025 when the remodelling will beexpected to be complete.
Related Articles
LifePort's BPS approved for Bell 412EP
Somalia receives Bell 412 helicopters of unknown origin
That additional lifespan will take the helicopters beyond their initial expected operational lifespan of 50 years.
The decision went against the advice of General Erik Kristoffersen, chief of the Norwegian Armed Forces, who believed the helicopters should be phased out at the end of their expected operational life cycle.
The new modifications will be aimed at keeping the Norwegian Armed Forces' helicopter fleet going until modern replacement aircraft can be procured. It is not yet clear when the Norwegian Armed Forces expects that procurement to come, but the aim of extending the fleet's life by 15 years indicates potential timelines for that replacement programme.
Defence contractor Patria was selectedto provide the modification design, a Supplemental Type Certificate (STC), working as a subcontractor for KAMS.
The modifications will take place in two phases. The first phase, which has now been agreed upon, will upgrade and update the helicopters' civil communications and navigation systems.
Norway's minister of defence Bjørn Arild Gram said the modifications were a way of ensuring Norway retained its helicopter coverage until more modern replacement aircraft become available and cost-effective.
“The Norwegian government has arranged for an increase in helicopter capacity in the long-term plan,” commentedGram.“By upgrading the Bell 412, we now ensure helicopter readiness until the new helicopters are in place, so that the Armed Forces will have better operational capacity during the transition period.”
Related Programmes in Defence Insight
Bell 412 Replacement Forecast (18)
Share
Recent Chats
Share via email
Future: handle WhatsApp here
Future: handle LinkedIn here
Future: handle Twitter here
SUBMENU HERE
Share via Chat
Copy Link