F_I_2015_03_17_23

(Steven Felgate) #1

28 | Flight International | 17-23 March 2015 flightglobal.com


UK DEFENCE


CRAIG HOYLE LONDON


Delivery by a Royal Air Force A400M of an unidentified


payload to support forces in Cyprus marks an important


milestone after four turbulent months for the programme


WEIGHTY


MATTERS


Crown Copyright

Crown Copyright

A


s it touched down at the Royal Air
Force’s Akrotiri base in Cyprus in
the evening of 3 March, aircraft
ZM400 became the first Airbus
A400M to deliver a payload of “vital freight”
for the service.
Piloted by a crew from the RAF’s Brize Nor-
ton-based 24 Sqn training unit, the “Atlas”
carried an unspecified cargo load to Akrotiri,
from where the UK is supporting US-led op-
erations against Islamic State militants in Iraq
with assets including Panavia Tornado GR4
strike aircraft.
The milestone event also delivered a boost
for both the service and manufacturer, after
what has been a turbulent four months for the
multinational A400M programme since
ZM400 – the RAF’s first of an eventual 22 ex-
amples – was transferred last November. Ac-
cording to plans that were still in place at that
time, the UK should have been in a position
to declare initial operational capability (IOC)
with the new type this month, on the intro-
duction of its seventh example.
But even as the A400M programme’s ninth
production aircraft, MSN15, was being show-
cased inside Base Hangar at Brize Norton on


27 November, it was clear that this schedule
was at risk. Exactly two months later, chief ex-
ecutive Tom Enders used an Airbus Group re-
ception in London to apologise to the UK
Ministry of Defence for problems affecting its
delivery schedule for the new-generation air-
lifter. “We have additional delays and I very
much regret that we are unable to meet the
commitments made to our customers several
years ago,” he said.

DELIVERIES
Despite the challenges facing the programme,
which Enders says centre on so-called “trav-
elled work” required on the A400M’s fuselage
and wing after their delivery to its San Pablo
final assembly facility in Seville, Spain, End-
ers pledged that Airbus would strive to get the
RAF’s fleet “to seven aircraft at least” by the
end of 2015. This target was confirmed during
the company’s annual results briefing in Mu-
nich on 27 February, and the UK now expects
the Atlas to hit its IOC target during Septem-
ber, after a six-month delay.
Four of the RAF’s aircraft have emerged so
far, with ZM401/MSN16 having been flown to
Airbus Defence & Space’s Getafe facility near
Madrid late last year to have its defensive aids
system equipment installed. Once this work

has been completed, the aircraft will be used
to support trials of the self-protection suite.
The UK’s third production aircraft –
ZM402/MSN17 – touched down at Brize Nor-
ton on 27 February, while its fourth, ZM403/
MSN20, was photographed in its service col-
ours in Seville on 8 March, suggesting that its
first flight is imminent.
Airbus expects to deliver around 16
A400Ms this year, and additional RAF aircraft
should account for close to half of this total,
also including MSNs 21 and 24 to 27.
In addition to supporting crew training
tasks, the first application for the Atlas – as
demonstrated by ZM400’s recent flight to Cy-
prus – is to provide a strategic air transport
capability. According to a schedule detailed
by the service late last year, such flights
should also be conducted in “non-benign”
airspace from around June 2016.
For the RAF, the significance of the A400M
having performed its first flight in support of
operations over Iraq before the first frontline

Aircraft ZM400 touched down
at Brize Norton last November

Support equipment was
flown to Akrotiri by a
crew from the RAF’s
24 Sqn training unit
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