France finalizes $1.3B USD contract for 2 Saab GlobalEye radar planes

 Instead of geese a-laying, the French Air Force got a different kind of bird for the sixth day of Christmas: two Saab GlobalEye radar surveillance planes. Paris finalized a deal today to buy the two planes for 12.3 billion Swedish Kroner (about $1.3 billion US), according to the Swedish manufacturer’s announcement.

France and Saab had announced the outlines of the deal at the Paris Air Show in June. This deal makes France the second export customer for GlobalEye, after the UAE’s fleet of five. Saab has also pushed the plane for NATO after the alliance recently canceled its order for Boeing’s E-7 Wedgetail.

“Today’s order underscores the robust partnership between Saab and France,” said Saab CEO Micael Johansson.

France will receive the first GlobalEye in 2029 and the second by 2032, the company said. The deal includes ground equipment, training, and other support, with an option to buy two additional aircraft. France is trying to replace its current Airborne Early Warning and Control fleet of five Boeing E-3F Sentry aircraft, which entered service in 1991 and, after extensive upgrades, are due to finally retire in the 2030s.

While the E-3 is a militarized version of a civilian airliner, the Boeing 707, GlobalEye is based on a business jet — the Bombardier Global 6000/6500 family. That’s a significant drop in size: maximum takeoff weight (MTOW) goes down 70 percent, from the 707’s 325,000 pounds to the Bombardier’s 99,500. Using a smaller aircraft is meant to lower operating costs and allow the use of smaller airfields, while still accommodating powerful capabilities thanks to the increasing miniaturization of modern electronics. GlobalEye’s sensor suite is built around Saab’s own Erieye Extended Range radar, which the company says can detect low-flying targets 285 miles away when operating at 35,000 feet.

Laisser un commentaire

Votre adresse e-mail ne sera pas publiée. Les champs obligatoires sont indiqués avec *