Irish Coast Guard search and rescue air (SAR) crew have warned lives may be lost if the current transition to a new operator and new type of aircraft is rushed.
As The Irish Independent reports, SAR technical air crew comprising winch teams and paramedics have outlined their concerns in a report seen by the newspaper.
The report refers to two fatal helicopter crashes where rushed transition was identified by investigators as a factor.
Bristow Ireland is currently taking over all four SAR bases from CHC Ireland, but the transition has already been delayed at Shannon and Sligo, and several accidents have occurred.
Bristow Ireland, which has confirmed one incident as “minor”, has said that “training and operating in dynamic environments means minor injuries can occur”.
The two instances the SAR technical air crew refer to in their report occurred in Norway in February 2024 and off Co Waterford in July 1999.
One life was lost during a Bristow training flight for the Norwegian oil and gas operator Equinor, and four Air Corps lives were lost off Co Waterford in 1999.
An internal report by Equinor into the February 2024 crash referred to the start-up of a new contract, which the training flight was part of, as being“perceived as tight”.
One Equinor nurse died and five Bristow crew were injured.
The Equinor investigation quotes nursing staff as stating “the phasing in of Bristow as the new operator of SAR helicopters went too quickly, so that there was little time for joint training in advance”.
The SAR technical crew also say a rushed transition was a factor identified in the investigation into the deaths of four Air Corps crew when the Rescue 111 Dauphin helicopter crashed into a sand dune in July 1999.
The technical air crew state in their report that almost 40% of them have lived through both the Rescue 111 and Rescue 116 crashes – the latter crash claiming four lives off the north Mayo coast in March 2017.
Their report has been submitted to the European Coordination Center for Accident and Incident Reporting systems.
Former Irish Coast Guard director Chris Reynolds told The Irish Independent last year that the transition timeline was too rushed, while RNLI Aran island medical officer Dr Marion Broderick has also expressed concerns about restricted availability of the Shannon helicopter.
A Bristow Ireland spokesman told the newspaper that “safety is, and always will be, at the heart of all Bristow’s operations”.
The Department of Transport said that “it will not allow risks to be taken in a rush to meet contractual deadlines” and “safety of crew, citizens and mariners is the overarching priority”.
Read The Irish Independent here

















































