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U.S. Firm To Buy Ten Russian-Made Be-200 Jets

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  • U.S. Firm To Buy Ten Russian-Made Be-200 Jets

    U.S. FIRM TO BUY TEN RUSSIAN-MADE BE-200 JETS

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    June 20, 2012 - 17:58 AMT

    PanARMENIAN.Net - An American company has signed up to buy ten
    Russian-made Beriev Be-200 amphibian aircrafts for use in the
    fire-fighting "airtanker" role, in a breakthrough contract to the
    U.S. market for the plane, RIA Novosti reported.

    "We have contracted for 10 Be-200s to use by us under expected
    federal and state fire fighting contracts," says TTE's President,
    David Baskett.

    TTE will lease the aircrafts to airtanker operators in the U.S.

    The value of the deal has not been disclosed, but in 2010 Russia's
    Emergencies Ministry signed a $330 million deal for eight of the
    planes configured for firefighting.

    Neither Beriev, which makes the planes, or United Aircraft Corporation,
    Russia's aerospace holding company, was available to confirm the deal
    on Wednesday, June 20.

    The contract award follows months of trials for the U.S. Interagency
    Air Tanker Board, which promotes safety of airtanker operations in
    the U.S..

    The aircraft was demonstrated in Taganrog, south Russia in May,
    and made practice water-drop demonstration flights for United States
    Forest Service officials, according to fireplanes.org. The Taganrog
    trials were conducted jointly by International Emergency Services,
    and Beriev, which funded the trials.

    The Be-200 can land on water and scoop up 3,000 gallons (12,00 liters)
    of water into its hull, and can then fly quickly to an affected area
    and drop its load onto a fire. It can also be reconfigured for search
    and rescue or passenger flying. Beriev is the world's only maker of
    large amphibious jet aircraft.

    The United States has an urgent need to renew its air tanker fleet as
    many existing planes in the role are obsolete and coming to the end of
    their lives. The FAA, the country's aviation watchdog, recently ordered
    safety checks on Lockheed Neptune P2V air tankers operated by Neptune
    Aviation after large cracks were found on a wing spar in one aircraft.

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