In an agreement that will save the US government more
than US$800 million, the Army and Boeing have signed a US$4 billion multi-year
contract for 177 CH-47F Chinook helicopters, with the Army holding options that
could increase its total buy to 215 aircraft.
Deliveries from the agreement, which is a cost-effective
alternative to annually contracting for the aircraft, begin in 2015.
“This multi-year contract provides unprecedented savings
for the US Army and American taxpayers,” said Col. Robert Barrie, US Army
project manager for Cargo Helicopters. “But the most important benefit is the
continued support these aircraft will provide to soldiers in the field and
civilians in distress.”
The tandem-rotor Chinook is the backbone of combat,
logistics and humanitarian operations for the US Army and 18 other operators
around the world. This order would eventually bring the Army’s CH-47F total
procurement close to its target of 464 aircraft, including 24 to replace
peacetime attrition aircraft. The Army’s current inventory stands at 241
F-model aircraft.
“The Army is benefiting not only from the efficiencies of
a multi-year contract but also from the production efficiency gains Boeing and
our suppliers have made,” said Chuck Dabundo, vice president, Boeing Cargo
Helicopter Programs. “That includes the US$130 million investment we made to
modernise the Chinook factory. This contract will enable Boeing and our
partners and suppliers in 45 states to bring stability to the workforce and to
invest in production tooling, processes and other capital improvements.”