Irish Coast Guard director Micheál O’Toole has said he has “full confidence” in the “platform” to deliver the new helicopter search and rescue service.
Speaking to RTÉ television’s Prime Time, O’Toole said that the change is a move to "the next generation of Coast Guard helicopter".
As Afloat has reported previously, the transition involved in the 800 million euro ten-year contract has been beset by delays.
Bristow was scheduled to move into the second of four bases at Sligo on February 14th, followed by Dublin and Waterford.
Under a new agreement with outgoing operator CHC Ireland, there has been a revised timeline for handover to Bristow Ireland, with Dublin set for July 1st, Sligo for December 16th and Waterford set for February 1st 2026.
Former Irish Coast Guard director Chris Reynolds has also expressed concern about a rushed timeline, and about the constraints that paramedics will have in the new aircraft, the AW189, given its smaller rear area.
Already, the Irish Aviation Authority has banned the new Irish Coast Guard rescue helicopter operator from transporting patients on stretchers in their newly leased aircraft as they are not compliant with safety regulations.
On the Prime Time report by Conor Wilson, Reynolds said that while the new helicopters will work for search and rescue on the east and south coasts, they are less suited to operations off the west coast of Ireland.
Interviewed for Prime Time, O’Toole said that “personally, I come from the west coast, I come from an offshore community, a community that's involved in the fishing industry”.
“So, I am acutely aware of what is the nature and the need for resilience in terms of that service, and I can categorically state that I have full confidence in this platform to deliver for us at those range extremities in which we operate,”he said.
Mr O’Toole said that the planned dates which were missed were indicative and that "there’s always been an element of flexibility required in timelines."
He also pointed out that there has been an absolute uninterrupted service to Coast Guard services during that period.
The programme reported that Bristow Ireland has no fatigue risk management system (FRMS) in place, which means rostering two crews for 12 hours each across a 24-hour period in Shannon.
The programme said that neither Mr O’Toole nor Bristow Ireland could give a timeframe for when the operator’s FRMS would be approved.
Read more on the RTÉ News website here

















































