Singapore Firm Makes Inroads Supplying U.S. With Firefighting Tankers

One of Singapore’s top defense contractors wants to build a tanker that could replace the U.S. National Guard’s C-130J Hercules and other models used to fight forest fires.

The C-130J and other existing firefighting tankers are growing older, opening room for competition, said Leon Tan, senior program manager at ST Engineering said Feb. 16 on the sidelines of the Singapore Airshow. As climate change accelerates the need for firefighting capabilities, the world needs aircraft that can keep up with the pace of the threat.

The Hercules — flown by the National Guard and Air Force Reserves in coordination with the U.S. Forest Service — carries the Modular Airborne Firefighting System, which converts the transport aircraft into tankers that dump retardant on fires.

“We realized the bigger aircraft [are] actually getting very old, DC-10s and others you want to replace,” Tan said during a press conference. The largest aerial fighter — based on a Boeing 747 Supertanker — was recently decommissioned and converted to a freighter, he pointed out.

Read more on this at National Defense

Ryan Mason
Ryan Mason
Ryan is an accomplished writer and aerial photographer that has worked in the aviation industry for over a decade before co-founding AerialFire Magazine. Originally from Melbourne, Australia, Ryan is a former police officer that focuses his writing and photography efforts on para-public operations and agricultural aviation.

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