CHC Helicopter
" Further. More. Home Safely " | |
Public | |
Traded as | NYSE: HELI |
Industry | Transportation |
Predecessor |
Sealand Helicopters Okanagan Helicopters Viking Helicopters |
Successor | Canadian Helicopters |
Founded | St. John's, Newfoundland (1987) |
Founder | Craig Dobbin |
Headquarters | Richmond, British Columbia, Canada |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people |
Karl Fessenden, CEO Lee Eckert, CFO |
Services | Helicopter services |
Revenue | $1.70 billion US (2015)[1] |
Number of employees | 4,500 (2014)[2] |
Subsidiaries | Heli-One |
Website |
www |
CHC Helicopter is a large helicopter services company, specializing in the following services:
- Transportation to offshore oil and gas platforms
- Civilian search and rescue and air medical evacuation services
- Helicopter maintenance repair and overhaul
CHC Helicopter is headquartered in Richmond, British Columbia, Canada and operates more than 250 aircraft in 30 countries around the world. CHC's major international operating units are based in Australia, Brazil, Ireland, the Netherlands, Norway, and the United Kingdom. The company is one of several global providers of helicopter transportation services to the offshore oil and gas industry (others including Bristow Helicopters). CHC has capabilities in precision flying techniques and technical support.
CHC has long-term working relationships with most of the major oil and gas companies. CHC operates the marine search and rescue service for the Irish Coast Guard at Shannon, Waterford, Sligo and Dublin airports and provides commercial Search and Rescue helicopter services for the United Kingdom Maritime and Coastguard Agency. CHC provides helicopter services in Australia for the Fire and Emergency Services Authority of Western Australia, Victoria Police and the Ambulance Service of New South Wales.
History
Commercial helicopter flying began in British Columbia in the summer of 1947. Three ex-RCAF officers, pilots Carl Agar and Barney Bent, and engineer Alf Stringer, were operating a fixed-wing charter company, Okanagan Air Services Ltd., from Penticton. In July 1947 they raised enough money to purchase a Bell 47-B3 and pay for their flying and maintenance training.
Okanagan Air Services moved to Vancouver in 1949, renamed Okanagan Helicopters Ltd. By 1954, had become the largest commercial helicopter operator in the world.
In 1987, Newfoundland businessman Craig Dobbin headed a group of investors organized under the name Canadian Holding Company and using the acronym CHC. CHC purchased Okanagan Helicopters, Viking Helicopters, and Toronto Helicopters and merged them with Dobbin's own company, Sealand Helicopters, to form a company named Canadian Helicopters. The parent company was renamed CHC Helicopter Corporation. CHC acquired British International Helicopters in 1994; Helicopter Services Group of Norway in 1999 (including Bond Helicopters), Helikopter Service AS, Lloyd Helicopters of Australia and Court Helicopters of South Africa. In 2004, CHC purchased Schreiner Aviation Group who provided offshore helicopter services company in the Dutch sector of the North Sea and in the Nigerian offshore industry.
In 2000, CHC entered into an agreement with Fonds de Solidarité FTQ (FSTQ) and the management of its two Canadian divisions, Canadian Helicopters Eastern and Canadian Helicopters Western, for the sale of an interest in CHC's Canadian assets in a management buyout to form Canadian Helicopters. As a result, senior management and FSTQ acquired 10% and 45% equity interests in Canadian Helicopters, respectively, while CHC retained a 45% equity interest.
CHC restructuring in 2004 saw the creation of a new corporate headquarters in Richmond, British Columbia and the creation of three main operating segments:
- CHC Global Operations, based in Richmond, B.C.,
- CHC European Operations, based in Aberdeen, Scotland, and
- Heli-One, CHC's leasing and repair and overhaul support group, now based in Delta, B.C.
In February 2008 all of CHC's shares were purchased by First Reserve, a US private equity company, for CAD$3.7 billion ($3.5 billion). At the time, the word "Corporation" was dropped from the company's name, which is now simply CHC Helicopter. On January 16, 2014 CHC announced an Initial Public Offering of 31,000,000 shares. First Reserve now holds 56.7% of CHC's shares.
Divisions
CHC manages its global operations through the following divisions:
- EEA Helicopter Operations B.V. ("EEA"), a Dutch company majority owned by EHO Holdings S.a.r.l. and minority owned by CHC Helicopter S.a.r.l., provides helicopter services in the North Sea. EEA operates under the CHC brand name and uses CHC logo under licence. It provides services from 17 bases in the UK, Ireland, Denmark, Norway and the Netherlands.[3]
- Brazilian Helicopter Services (BHS) (Brazil)
- CHC Helicopters Global Operations/Corporate Office (Richmond, British Columbia)
- CHC Helicopters (Australia)
- CHC Helicopters (Africa)
- CHC Composites (Gander, Newfoundland)
CHC EMS and SAR services
Ireland
CHC Helicopter serves as the sole provider of Search and Rescue helicopter services to the Irish Coast Guard, where it had operated a fleet of six Sikorsky S-61N helicopters based in Dublin, Shannon, Waterford, and Sligo. This fleet has now been replaced by 5 Sikorsky S-92 Helibus. The S-61N exited service in December 2013 with a flight from Dublin Airport to Weston Aerodrome, West Dublin. The flight was operated by EI-SAR, the oldest S-61N in commercial operation at the time.[4]
United Kingdom
CHC currently provides SAR helicopters to two of the four Maritime and Coastguard Agency bases in the UK; Portland, Lee-on-Solent, and until recently also operated from Sumburgh and Stornoway. CHC, as part of the Soteria SAR consortium was selected as the "Preferred Bidder" for a 25-year contract to provide a civilian Search and Rescue service throughout the United Kingdom.[5] However, days before the contract was due to be signed in February 2011, the British Government halted the process after CHC disclosed that it had unauthorised access to commercially sensitive information.[6]
Australia
CHC is the largest provider of emergency medical helicopter services in Australia.
Military
- Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) - CHC has been providing dedicated rescue support to the RAAF since 1989, where it operates Sikorsky S76.
Police
- Victoria Police Air Wing and Air Ambulance Services - CHC provides three Eurocopter SA365N3 Dauphin and one Eurocopter EC135 aircraft, plus maintenance services, to the Victoria Police.
Ambulance
- Fire and Emergency Services Authority of Western Australia - Based in Perth, WA, CHC provides a Bell 412 EP aircraft.
- Ambulance Victoria - Up until the end of 2015, CHC provided two Bell 412EP helicopters for Air Ambulance and Search and Rescue duties.
- Ambulance Service of New South Wales - CHC provides three AW139s and two EC145 helicopters to supplement Ambulance NSW's eight contracted aeromedical helicopters. These are based at Wollongong, Sydney and Orange, New South Wales.[7]
- Snowy Hydro SouthCare Air Ambulance Service[8] - CHC operates a Bell 412 for emergency helicopter service, based in Symonston, Australian Capital Territory.
Norway
- Norwegian Search and Rescue - CHC provides private Search and Rescue services in the Norwegian sector of the North Sea, but acts in concert with the Norwegian rescue coordination centres. The CHC SAR fleet includes two Super Puma L1 and three Super Puma EC 225.[9]
Other related services
- NH90: CHC is designing, manufacturing and installing 19 life-raft assembly kits for the NH90 helicopter, a new military search and rescue helicopter provided to the miltary of several European countries through a joint venture shared by Agusta, Eurocopter and Fokker.
- Supply, rescue, and support Services: CHC provides extensive ship supply and rescue service off the coast of Africa and the Netherlands, and helicopter support services to scientific expeditions in Antarctica and other harsh environments.
Fleet
CHC operates approximately 250 aircraft in over 30 countries which include Malaysia, Australia, Brazil, Thailand, the Philippines, the Middle East, South Africa, Ecuador, Angola, Gabon, and Equatorial Guinea.[10]
Helicopters
- 41 - AgustaWestland AW139
- 36 - Eurocopter Super Puma AS332, L1, L2
- 40 - Eurocopter EC225
- 8 - Eurocopter AS365 N1,N2,N3 Dauphin
- 53 - Sikorsky S76 A and C Series
- 46 - Sikorsky S92
- 5 - Bell 412
- 5 - Airbus EC135/145/155
Locations
- Sydney • Orange • Wollongong • Newcastle
- Melbourne • Latrobe Valley • Bendigo
- Perth • Karratha • Broome
- Richmond
- Delta
- Halifax
- Esbjerg
- Cork • Dublin • Shannon • Waterford • Sligo
- Stavanger • Bergen • Florø • Kristiansund • Brønnøysund
- Den Helder
- Aberdeen • Norwich • Humberside
Accidents and incidents
See also
References
- ↑ "CHC Group Reports Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2015 Resultsaccessdate=2016-01-25".
- ↑ "Company Profile for CHC Helicopter Corp (HELI)". Retrieved 2014-09-08.
- ↑ http://www.chc.ca/corporate_aboutchc.php
- ↑ http://www.airliners.net/photo/2051408/
- ↑ "Press Release". Soteria SAR. 9 February 2010. Retrieved 6 April 2010.
- ↑ UK government shelves helicopter search and rescue privatisation
- ↑ Ambulance_Service_of_New_South_Wales#Helicopter_operations
- ↑ http://www.snowyhydrosouthcare.com.au/pages/page2.asp
- ↑ https://www.norskoljeoggass.no/PageFiles/1219/underlagsrapport_064_2012_engelsk%20versjon%20korrigert%20av%20Jan%20Erik%20Vinnem%2018122012.pdf?epslanguage=no
- 1 2
- ↑ https://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/wiki.php?id=186855
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to CHC Helicopter. |
- CHC Helicopter
- CHC Helicopter History
- Canadian Helicopters
- Setting the Standard, by Vertical Magazine
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