The transition project for the Irish Coast Guard’s new helicopter search and rescue contract has been stalled due to safety concerns, the Sunday Independent reports.
Documents obtained by the newspaper are believed to show that rescue staff are concerned about rushed plans to transfer the service from existing operator, CHC Ireland, to Bristow Helicopters.
The contract is due to come into force at all four helicopter bases by July 1st 2025, with the Shannon base being the first to make the transition.
Bristow was awarded the 800 million euro contract over ten years last August. It has said it is working to meet all operations and certification standards, but the first flights from Shannon have not yet taken place.
The newspaper reports that Bristow and CHC were involved in a transition in Norway between 2022 and 2023 when Bristow took on search-and-rescue flights for oil company Equinor.
A woman died, and five others were injured when one of the helicopters crashed into the North Sea during a training exercise.
While there was no suggestion the Bristow-CHC handover was a factor in the crash, the investigation’s main conclusions noted the transition was questioned and “perceived as tight”.
The newspaper reports that a report shared last July on an internal Coast Guard safety management system referred to “compressed” timelines on switching providers from CHC Ireland to Bristow.
These concerns were later shared with the Department of Transport, the Irish Aviation Authority (IAA) and European regulators, it says.
Read The Sunday Independent here