World’s largest firefighting plane leaves service ahead of US wildfire season

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World’s Largest Firefighting Plane Leaves Service Ahead Of Us Wildfire Season
A Boeing 747-400 Global SuperTanker drops half a load of its 19,400-gallon capacity (Christian Murdock/AP), © AP/Press Association Images
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By Patty Nieberg, Associated Press

The world’s largest firefighting plane has been shut down just as western US states prepare for a wildfire season that fire officials fear could be worse than the average year.

Tara Lee, a spokeswoman for Washington governor Jay Inslee, said via email on Friday that the state’s Department of Natural Resources was alerted to the shutdown of the world’s largest firefighting plane called the Global SuperTanker.

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Representatives from that department did not immediately respond to questions about how that move could affect the state’s firefighting efforts.

The decision to cease the SuperTanker’s operations was first reported by Fire Aviation, an industry website that reported an email was sent this week to officials in Colorado, Oregon, Washington and the US government saying that the investor group that owns the plane was shutting it down.


Damage from the 2020 CZU Lightning Complex Fire is seen at Big Basin Redwoods State Park in Boulder Creek, California (Nic Coury/AP)
Damage from the 2020 CZU Lightning Complex Fire is seen at Big Basin Redwoods State Park in Boulder Creek, California (Nic Coury/AP)

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A spokesman for company that operates the plane, Global SuperTanker Services LLC, declined to comment on Friday.

The Global SuperTanker is a converted Boeing 747 plane that can dump up to 19,200 gallons (72,678 litres) of water or flame retardant in just six seconds and fly as low as 200 feet above the ground to do its work.

It can be refilled in just 13 minutes.


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The SuperTanker has helped in many Western wildfires and was deployed in Israel in 2016 and in Chile in 2017.

Costs can run as much as 250,000 US dollars a day.

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