Canadian American Strategic Review

CASR
Home

Index to
ModProp

Buffalo
Index

Background
Index

In Detail
Index

DND 101
Home

A Modest Proposal  —  SAR Aircraft:  Rethinking  Search and Rescue

Update 21 July 2001: yet another FWSAR Industry Day has been announced to cover the revised Statement of  Operational Requirements (SOR)  and  to investigate Alternative Service Delivery options. Also see: Time to calve off  SAR. Civilians may prove more Cost-Effective.

A host of former military function are now provided by Alternative Service Delivery contractors.  The Air Force was quick  to jump on ASD to cover pilot and crew training  (Canada Wings and  NFTC ) but is loathe to give up its aerial search and rescue role.  However, there is an international trend in this direction. That trend has been strongest for rotary-wing SAR (indeed, Canadian Helicopters Inter- national is a major provider of privatized SAR services abroad) but there are also examples of private fixed wing services suggesting alternatives to the FWSAR project.

Australia provides a model  for ASD-style  SAR.  Like the CF,  the RAAF was responsible for SAR in the past. RAAF aircraft still assist with SAR, but the key FWSAR type is the Bombardier Q200 ( Dash-8 ) with maritime search radar and electro-optical sensors. These aircraft are owned by the Coastwatch (a division of  the Australian Customs Service) but operated and maintained, under contract, by private contractors. This arrangement allows Australia to control the aircraft and determine its sensor suite, but the mixed fleet of  modified  Dash-8-200/-300 series aircraft are operated by the successful bidder (currently NAS) for a 12 year contract.

Neither concept nor  technology is foreign to Canada.[1] DFO  contracted  surveillance patrols  to PAL  [2]  (right) for years and Transport Canada's NASP (National Aerial Surveillance Program) operates a  former Canadian Coast Guard Dash 8 now fitted with a similar sensor suite to the Coastwatch aircraft  ( MSS 6000, which includes side-looking radar,infrared/ultraviolet line scanner, Wescam MX-15 imager, Automated Identification System, MDF-124F direction finder, and  high speed SATCOM ).

So, the proposal is simply this: recognize that search and rescue is not a core military task but, rather, a civilian responsibility. Assign FWSAR to a civilian agency under the SAR Directorate. Transport Canada seems suitable  –  existing Transport Canada patrol aircraft operate from civilian airports and are flown by contracted  pilots, a situation not unlike that of  Australia's Coastwatch.  Available  CF aircraft still participate in aerial SAR when needed, it just wouldn't invest major resources in SAR squadrons or projects like FWSAR.

[1] The RCAF was given prime responsibility for aerial SAR back in 1947. Despite coordinating organizations like the NSS (National SAR Secretariat), overall responsibility for SAR rests with local authorities (usually RCMP) assisted by volunteers like the pilots of  CASARA. [2] PAL flies small economical Beech B200 King Airs carrying electro-optical imagers and belly-mounted Litton AN/APS-504 search radar.