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Canada To Buy 16 Military Rescue Planes From Airbus For $2.3 Billion

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Dec, 2016 01:02 PM
    OTTAWA — The federal government says Canada will spend $2.3 billion to replace the military's ancient search-and-rescue planes with 16 new aircraft from European aerospace giant Airbus.
     
    Public Procurement Minister Judy Foote and Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan made the announcement in CFB Trenton this morning.
     
    Today's announcement has been a long time coming.
     
    The effort to replace the air force's existing search-and-rescue planes, some of which have been flying since the 1960s, has been mired in controversy and delays for more than a decade.
     
    Sajjan says the new C-295 planes are a game-changer when it comes to the military responding to distress calls and other emergencies around the country.
     
    Foote says the contract will also benefit Canadian industry as Airbus has paired with a number of Canadian companies to provide the planes' engines as well as simulators and long-term maintenance.
     
    The first C-295 will be delivered in 2019, with the last to arrive in 2022.

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    Teen Girl Pleads Guilty To Murder In Beating Death Of Six-Week-Old Boy In Saskatoon

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    Mounties In Langley, B.C., Search For Man Who Exposed Himself To Teen Girls

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    Study: More Than 45,000 Canadians Sought Treatment Abroad In 2015

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    No Jail Time For Man Who Assaulted Abbotsford Nurse

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    A man who attacked a nurse at an Abbotsford, B.C., hospital will not serve time in jail.

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